by Beth Sullivan
As the season warms up,
the frog sounds begin to diminish. No more Peepers , no quacking Wood
frogs. We still hear the Gray Tree frogs before a rain, and if we're
lucky, we can hear Bull frogs chorus through the summer.
But now is the season
for the silent turtles.
The frogs and
salamanders can lay eggs in the cold water and they themselves can
tolerate being nearly frozen. But the reptiles emerge from
hibernation a bit later than most amphibians-they require warmth to
fuel their life-drives-for feeding, mating and nesting. Because they
do not stay with their nests, they rely on the warmth of the sun to
incubate their eggs.
If you have lived near
a pond or lake, you know you can count on Painted turtles to emerge
first, finding their way onto rocks or logs or mossy banks, to sit in
the March sunshine. Their dark shells capture the sun's warmth and
fuel their cold blood to inspire them to move. If you have ever
noticed a whole collection of turtles, all sizes, sitting along a log
in a pond, these are the painted turtles.
Painted Turtles leave the pond to find a warm, dry spot to nest. |
Sun bathing for warmth
The
Eastern Box turtle is strictly a land turtle. They may be found
soaking in shallow puddles, but cannot swim. They walk acres of
territory, hoping to encounter a mate, and if they are successful,
they too seek sunny warm sand and gravel in which to lay their eggs.
A Box Turtle may choose to come out of the woods to dig in your lawn. |
The male Eastern Box Turtles have bright red eyes. |
The other aquatic
turtle that is commonly encountered at this time of year is the
Snapping Turtle. As every kid knows, these are the ones that look
like dinosaurs: jagged long tails, plain gray/black muddy colored
shell and beady eyes that just dare you to get too close. By the
time they are of the age to lay eggs, they have reached a good size.
And while they may be slow to move across a lawn or roadway, their
heads are lightning-fast and their powerful jaws can do a bit of
damage to one’s soft tissue on hands or feet. All species of
aquatic turtles are dependent on warm sandy areas to lay their eggs.
They leave the pond, sometimes to travel a short way to a sandy
beach. In many instances, however, they seem to take a long journey
away from their wetlands to find a perfect spot. It might be a sand
box, compost pile, a vegetable garden, or your lawn.
This female chose the soft sand on a busy roadside to create her nest. |
There are local
legends-turtles that are huge, that return to the same area, year
after year, for decades, to lay their eggs. Even if a building or a
road has blocked the way, nothing will deter a mother Snapper on a
mission.
When cleaned-up, there is beauty in a Snapping Turtle, but the sharp beak and powerful jaws are not to be treated lightly. |
We know there is such a
whopper living in the White Cedar Swamp Preserve, off Jerry Browne
Road. I have seen her myself. Today while driving that stretch,
we noticed a Snapper, not THE snapper, right at the edge of the road,
with a well scraped-out hole for laying eggs. Surely a precarious
place, and certainly not a good one for the young to hatch from later
in the summer. We got out to check on her; another car also stopped
to keep traffic away from her. We were not about to try and move her,
but fairly quickly she decided on her own, that having gawking
humans was not her idea of ideal circumstance for what she needed to
do. So she turned around slowly and slid ungracefully down a grassy
slope into the slow moving stream that led back to her pond. We can
only hope she will find a safer, sandy place to nest.
You may encounter a Painted Turtle well away from water, likely a female in nesting season. |
All Snappers snap
If you encounter a
turtle on the road, you can stop, if it is safe to do so. All
species of turtles can bite, so be careful and do not under any
circumstance go near the head of a Snapping turtle, no matter what
size. If you can safely do so, you can guide or assist the animal
to the side of the road it was heading toward. Do not assume it was
going to water, it may be a mom on a mission.
Photographs by Beth
Sullivan.
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