Posts Tagged ‘turtle’

Landslide!

Wednesday, September 3rd, 2008

You’ve just been born; you discard your eggshell and tunnel to the surface. Now you must make a mad dash for safety. Unlike sea turtles who hatch at night and head for the brightest horizon (hopefully the sea, but all too often a local fast food restaurant), you emerge during the day and head out in a random “drunkard’s walk” without any clear sense of direction, hoping to find vegetative shelter. Momma lays her nest on a steep slope, hoping you’ll take the hint and slide downward into the safety of wrack line and salt marsh grasses. But you choose the “high road,” struggling like a Mount Everest sherpa to climb the soft, sandy, high dune of Turtle Point. And then comes the landslide.

Confronting Sandy Avalanche with Neither Angst Nor Doubt

Peek Inside the Egg Chamber

Tuesday, September 2nd, 2008

Like a clenched fist deep inside a carefully carved terrapin nest lies the egg chamber where the female has deposited her clutch 75 days earlier. When the clock chimes “emergence,” hatchlings squirm and wiggle their way free of their siblings to begin their dash for survival.  Today at noon the alarm rang for Nest 280 on the high dune of Turtle Point on Lieutenant Island.  Count noses, count eyes, count limbs as hatchlings get ready to sprint for freedom.

Hatchling Bunched Tightly in Egg Chamber

Neither Angst Nor Doubt

Sunday, August 31st, 2008

Tiny 1-inch, quarter ounce diamondback terrapin hatchlings emerge from the sands of the Outer Cape and scramble against seemingly insurmountable odds and a host of hungry, impatient predators to find cover in the surrounding marsh. Restrained by neither angst nor doubt, they exhibit the epitome of an indomitable spirit to achieve success in the face of impossible obstacles.

No Obstacle Stops Determined Terrapin Hatchlings

The Hatchling Also Rises

Wednesday, August 27th, 2008

A diamondback terrapin hatchling emerges from its Turtle Point nest and begins its scramble into the safety of the Lieutenant Island nursery marsh.

Lone Hatchling Slowly Emerges & Heads to Safety

Flying Insect Ovipositing on Terrapin Nesting Dune

Monday, August 25th, 2008

Voracious and aggressive predators of just pipped diamondback terrapin hatchlings are insect maggots. A large percentage of terrapin nests are invaded by these maggots that destroy hatchlings before they can ever emerge. We have identified at least one species of these maggots. On Monday, 25 August, I observed this flying insect inspecting the tracks of recently emerged hatchlings and then ovipositing immediately atop these tracks on the terrapin nesting dune at Turtle Pass.

Wasp-Like Insect Ovipositing on Turtle Pass Dune