Too Soon!!! August Woolly Bear Appears

August 16th, 2011

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Woolly Bear (Pyrrharctia isabella)

Too soon!  Far too soon!!  This afternoon a woolly bear caterpillar … the larva stage of the common Isabella Tiger Moth (Pyrrharctia isbella) — strolled onto the back deck of Turtle Journal Headquarters.  “It’s only mid August!” I cried, but alas Nature would not listen to my plea.

August Woolly Bear (Pyrrharctia isabella)

Terrapin 9898 Nests on Fifth Avenue

July 9th, 2011

Terrapin 9898 Completing Nest

Yes, Fifth Avenue.  But no Macy’s, no Saks, no New York, New York.  Instead, beautiful diamondback terrapin #9898  is nesting on the one-lane dirt road Fifth Avenue on Lieutenant Island in South Wellfleet.  This Fifth Avenue is renowned as the epicenter of terrapin nesting in the Northeast, not high scale shopping for which the other Fifth Avenue is noted.

In the midst of a torrential downpour and dramatic thunderstorm, Terrapin 9898 dug her second and final nest of the season in the west tire track of Fifth Avenue.  Turtle Journal came across her as lightning danced in the tree tops overhead and thunder claps shook the island.  We parked the car to block road traffic to protect her vulnerability from disturbance and potential injury.

After she completed the nest, we excavated her eggs and moved them to a safer location on Turtle Point.  Because she had nested in the midst of the storm, her eggs were floating in several inches of water inside the egg chamber.  Terrapin 9898 scrambled down the bank and slipped into the salt marsh.  With her responsibilities to the next generation done for 2011, her key task between now and 1 October is to forage in order to restore the 20% body mass she has invested in her two clutches, so she can survive the cold hard winter ahead.

Turtling in the Rain

June 29th, 2011

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Eastern Box Turtle in Paradise

Humans may not appreciate sustained summer rains, but Eastern box turtles consider these conditions paradise.  Lots of moisture to keep hydrated while pursuing their most favored delicacy:  slugs!  Picture if you will that epic battle of speed and cunning … NOT between the tortoise and the hare, but between a lumbering box turtle and a slithering slug.  No, it’s not a sleek cheetah chasing down a graceful gazelle in a breathless sprint.  Yet it’s just as dramatic, and just as lethal.  And the outcome painted on the turtle’s lips is just as satisfying … for the predator, that is.

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Hans on the Hunt

With the rains emerged Eastern box turtles from under leaves and protective scrapes & burrows where they’ve hidden waiting for the perfect moment to move out of the woodlands and into the fields for foraging and mating and nesting.

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Abbe Advances

Field school participants gained practice and experience by tracking down a radio-tagged 10-year-old box turtle.  As the signal vectored the team toward the general area of the tagged turtle, eager eyes scanned the woodlands and discovered the gentle critter hiding under some dropped branches.

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Pat on Point

With the confidence gained by this tracking exercise, the team cut loose to find untagged turtles scattered around more than a 1000 acres of Mass Audubon’s Wellfleet Bay Wildlife Sanctuary.

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Eureka! Bruce, Peter & Hans Examine Box Turtle

As each Eastern box turtle was discovered, the team examined it to identify its gender and to assess its health.  They weighed and recorded its mass, an indicator of how well hydrated these animals had become in these perfect turtle conditions.  The team measured length and width of carapace (top shell) and plastron (bottom shell).  They documented all these data and GPS’d the turtle’s location to add to more than three decades of Eastern box turtle studies on the Wellfleet Bay Wildlife Sanctuary.

MORE TURTLE FIELD SCHOOL STORIES TO FOLLOW

Wet, Wild, Wonderful Turtle Field School

June 28th, 2011

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Turtles of Cape Cod Field School 2011 Mascot

The weather turned wet and wild on Cape Cod this week as the 11th Annual Turtles of Cape Cod Field School convene at Mass Audubon’s Wellfleet Bay Wildlife Sanctuary in South Wellfleet.  Temperatures dipped into the mid 50s during evenings and just edged the thermometer into the low 60s during the day.  Dense Londonesque fog blanketed the landscape, only interrupted by torrential downpours, punctuated by rolling thundershowers. 

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Field School Participants Cluster Around First Box Turtle

Impossible turtle conditions?  Nope … this week proved PERFECT weather as the field school set an all time record for Eastern box turtle captures on the Outer Cape!

Hunting for Eastern Box Turtles in the Rain

Whether tracking a radio-tagged 10-year-old box turtle or discovering new turtles never encountered in more than three decades of research at the Wellfleet Bay Wildlife Sanctuary, field school participants were on the hunt … and they produced.

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Bob Prescott Documents Eastern Box Turtle

Not for fun or sport, although the fun part can never be discounted, the goal of this research work is to ensure the survival of a protected species in Massachusetts.  Box turtle populations have significantly declined throughout the Commonwealth as human pressures transform natural habitats.  The knowledge gained through the dedication of turtle field school participants may prove the deciding factor in preserving this exquisite species for generations to come.  Congratulations to Linda, Peter, Pat, David, Bruce, Abbe, Jim, MaryBeth and Hans for an extraordinary field school experience and a job well done!

Stay Tuned to Turtle Journal

More Field School 2011 Highlights to Follow

Anger and Joy As An Old Turtle Friend Returns to Turtle Point

June 22nd, 2011

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Terrapin #365 Missing Both Front Limbs

With a mixture of anger and joy, Don Lewis of Turtle Journal welcomed the return of Diamondback Terrapin #365 to Lieutenant Island on Sunday.  This female terrapin has been under observation by the terrapin research project for 15 years, and Don has personally watched her nesting at Turtle Point since July 2000, when her nest became the first ever protected on Cape Cod.  When she was last seen in May 2008 in the Fresh Brook Run mating aggregation, #365 was a perfect, healthy terrapin.  Yet, as she struggled ashore to nest on Sunday, both her front limbs were missing below the joint.  The wounds were healed and she compensated well enough to successfully nest, but she remained handicapped both on land and back in the water. 

Terrapin #365 Nests on Turtle Point

She reached the shore about a quarter mile from her traditonal Turtle Point nesting site and struggled over the thick salt hay wrack.  After Don examined, measured, weighed and documented her condition, he walked her to tip of Turtle Point to save her some wear, tear and energy.  Terrapin #365 immediately began her nesting ritual as Don withdrew beyond her sight to witness the process.  You can observe in the video sequence above how she drove her front stumps into the ground like spikes to hold herself stable while she dug the nest, deposited her eggs and covered up.

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Terrapin #365’s Thirteen Perfect Eggs

From a scientific standpoint, Terrapin #365 continues to provide valuable data.  We obtained her weight before nesting (1144 grams) and after nesting (1042 grams), and as can be seen above, we weighed her entire 13 egg clutch at 97 grams. 

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Terrapin #365’s Nine Eggs from July 18th, 2000

Terrapin #365, way back in July of 2000, provided the first nest that we protected to begin our decade long conservation initiative.  On July 18th, she came ashore at Turtle Point, weighing 1070 grams; she dropped to 982 grams after depositing nine perfect eggs (see photo above).

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Terrapin #365 – First Nest Ever Protected in July 2000

Before we built wire cages as predator excluders, we used seat-of-the-pants methods to protect nests.  Terrapin #365’s nest on 18 July was the first we tried to save with a combination of driftwoord and stakes, and other more exotic procedures.  Surprisingly, whether through our efforts or simple serendipity, the eggs hatched on October 10th after 83 days of incubation.

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Nest Protectors (Predator Excluders) on Turtle Point (2011)

Today, of course, we are more sophisticated with PEs (predator excluders) embedded deeply into the sand and stapled to the ground.  Terrapin #365’s eggs have been covered by such a nest protector on the high dune of Turtle Point.

 

Terrapins #365 Release into Black Duck Creek

Again, to save her some wear and tear on her injured limbs, Don brought her to Black Duck Creek by the Lieutenant Island Bridge for release back into the wild.  As he watched her slip into the distance, Don observed that she was having difficulty exerting enough thrust with her back legs alone to counter the strong tidal current and to dive beneath the surface.  Yet, in tribute to terrapins that persist in the face of such enormous obstacles, I remember the words of broadcaster John Cameron Swayze who coined the phrase, “They take a licking and keep on ticking;” a fitting motto for these hardy critters.  And, clearly, Terrapin #365 has become the new model for a species fighting for survival in a world that’s changing in ways not for the better … neither for man nor for beast.