Cape Breton Post

Turtle researcher­s hit the jackpot

New discovery made in southwest Nova Scotia

- JONATHAN RILEY TC MEDIA CONTROVERS­Y

Turtle researcher­s in southwest Nova Scotia have hit the jackpot.

After decades of searching the woods and waterways, volunteers with the Mersey Tobeatic Research Institute (MTRI) have found a fourth pocket of Blanding’s turtles in Nova Scotia.

“I might have danced around the room,” says biologist Jeffie McNeil. “We had a very credible sighting report and then we were able to follow up on that and found so many turtles. We have a lot of questions and we’re really just starting.”

Blanding’s turtles are endangered in Nova Scotia and before this discovery researcher­s knew of three population­s totalling maybe 350 adults.

It was a trout fisherman who called MTRI last fall to say he’d seen Blanding’s turtles and Ribbon snakes in another spot. Both reptiles are species at risk in Nova Scotia and both are “disjunct” population­s, meaning cut off and isolated from the main population­s in other parts of North America.

McNeil went out last fall to do visual surveys even though turtles slow down and become harder to find. McNeil couldn’t find any turtles but she did find one Ribbon snake.

This spring a team of volunteers from MTRI started looking again in earnest.

“It’s easier in the spring before the vegetation and leaves come out,” says Harold Clapp of Smith’s Cove, who along with his wife Diane has been looking for Blanding’s turtles since 2006.

The couple have done visual surveys and set out sardinelad­en traps on 24 different water bodies all across southweste­rn Nova Scotia. Still, in 10 years of constant searching they only managed to find a few scattered turtles.

They headed into the woods in April this year with volunteers and summer students from MTRI to check out the new lead. Turtles leave their overwinter­ing spots in the spring and start moving around and will often climb up to a sunny spot on warm afternoons.

The first couple of weeks of searching turned up nothing.

“I was starting to wonder if this was going to be like all those other places we looked, like all those other tips we followed up,” says Harold.

And then one day they found one. The next day they found four.

“Finding even one new turtle is a big deal, we’ve done a lot of looking and it doesn’t happen very often,” says Harold. “For a while we were finding a new one every day or so, it was very exciting.”

 ?? TC MEDIA PHOTO ?? From right, Harold Clapp and Carter Feltham check the radio transmitte­r and GPS logger on a Blanding’s turtle. Clapp is also checking to see if the turtle is gravid — or ready to lay eggs — by feeling for eggs under the turtle’s shell.
TC MEDIA PHOTO From right, Harold Clapp and Carter Feltham check the radio transmitte­r and GPS logger on a Blanding’s turtle. Clapp is also checking to see if the turtle is gravid — or ready to lay eggs — by feeling for eggs under the turtle’s shell.

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