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Study Finds Turtle Embryos Communicate To Synchronize Hatching

Embryonic Turtles Communicate to Coordinate Hatching
From “Wired UK” by By Olivia Solon, Wired UK, 12/2/11
Murray River turtles communicate with their siblings while they are still in their shells, buried under the soil, in order to coordinate when they hatch.

Achieving this synchronicity isn’t easy. Although the eggs are always laid at the same time in the same nest, those at the top of the nest near the sun-drenched soil develop much faster than those buried deeper in the cooler soil. However, Murray River turtles are able to tell whether their fellow hatchlings are more or less advanced and adapt their pace of development accordingly, allowing the slow-coaches to play catch-up.

Ricky-John Spencer from the University of Western Sydney has been studying the turtles for years. In 2003 he collected dozens of batches of wild turtle eggs, split them into two groups and incubated them at either 25C or 30C. He then reunited the eggs and discovered that they still hatched together. At this point he wasn’t sure whether the colder batch were hatching prematurely or speeding up their development.

To follow this up, his team got hold of pregnant Murray River turtles and let them lay their eggs in a lab environment. They split each lot of eggs into two groups — incubating one group at 26C and the other at 30C. Other batches of turtles eggs were split into two groups but both incubated at 26C. After a week of development, the batches were reunited. Spencer’s student Jessica McGlashan monitored each of the embryo’s metabolism by measuring the heart rate and carbon dioxide emissions.

McGlashan discovered that if embryos were incubated with the more developed peers, they sped up their development. In the weeks running up to hatching, their heart rates sped up and they exhaled 67 percent more carbon dioxide than the control group of turtles whose siblings had stayed at 26C.
Once they hatched, it became clear that these turtles had used up more of their yolk supplies in order to catch up, but they were found to be just as strong as their less rushed counterparts.

The team concluded that the embryos must be able to communicate with each other while they are still in their shells, but it’s not clear how. They suggest that it could be down to changes in the nest that trigger certain hormones that change the turtles’ metabolism. Embryos produce more thyroid hormone when oxygen levels fall. The fast-developing embryos could use up the oxygen levels around the next and emit more carbon dioxide. The reduction in oxygen could cause the slower developers to produce more thyroid hormone and therefore grow faster.

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Nature is simply amazing!

Ban Atrazine!

Hi folks,

You may remember my story about the herbicide Atrazine in my last ENP newsletter…well, more research has been conducted and yet more results are in…this destructive chemical needs to be banned from use forever.

Read a new article (and several other related articles) on Atrazine and its effect on wildlife and the environment by clicking here.

Read more about Atrazine and its effects on amphibians at Save the Frogs.

Please call or email your policy makers and government officials with your concerns about why this harmful chemical should be banned.

Please sign this online petition to help ban Atrazine.

Thank you.

Steve

Charlie Green named Hero of the Month at WNC Nature Center !

WOO HOO!! Charlie Green, longtime friend and supporter of Earthshine Nature Programs,  recently was named  Hero of the Month at the WNC Nature Center!  Charlie is not only hero of the month but he is a hero to countless turtles and turtle people everywhere! He has helped thousands of injured and displaced turtles survive and thrive, he has taught thousands of children and adults the value of our native wildlife and he has inspired thousands of people to learn more about reptiles  and wildlife.  Charlie inspired me to continue to follow my dream and passion of wildlife conservation and public wildlife education.  Charlie has supported Earthshine Nature Programs with donations of not only supplies but also his incredible knowledge of turtles for many years.   Without you Charlie Green, Earthshine Nature Programs would probably not exist.  THANK YOU Charlie Green you are truly a hero to us all.
Read the entire story here.

Charlie Green and me at the WNC Nature Center

 

 

Turtle Tracks Update Fall 2011

It has been a great year for Jimmy Irwin and Catherine–the resident turtles at Earthshine Lodge.  They both had active summers with lots of good rains and great opportunities for moving about the mountain, feeding and meeting other turtles.  While I did not observe Jimmy with any other turtles this year, it was very different with Catherine.  I found her mating with two different males once near Earthshine and again over Richland Ridge where she spent most of the summer!  It seems that Catherine is a very popular turtle and hopefully the future of box turtles on the mountain is safe within her shell.  Take a look at the video below from one of the times I found Catherine with a male.

Jimmy and Catherine have both put on reserves of fat for the long winter’s torpor and now seem to have chosen their overwintering sites for this year.  Catherine is in the almost exact location–within inches–of where she spent the previous winter and Jimmy is within about two feet of his last years overwintering site.

Mrs. Bones, one of the turtles on our Cedar Mountain study site–seems to have also decided on her overwintering location for this year.  The site she has chosen is only ~30 feet east of the last two years’ overwintering sites.  The last time I located her–on the 15th of November–she was not visible on the surface and in an area of dense Rhododendrons and Mountain Laurels beside a huge rotting pine log.

Mr. Bones, who lives in the same forest as Mrs. Bones, has been missing due to a malfunctioning transmitter since the late summer of 2010.  I have tried to locate him several times using turtledogs and technology but to no avail–he remains MIA.

It is truly amazing to me that the box turtle has such a powerful instinct that allows it to consistently find the same tiny spot in such a huge forest.  Like the ancient sea turtle who can find the beach where it was born, the box turtle has the same instinct to return to the same feeding, overwintering and nesting locations year after year.

If you find a box turtle (or any other turtle) crossing a road simply pick it up and move it off the road in the direction it was facing.  You do not need to take it to a new forest–that is not its home–it will try to walk home to where you found it.    This is only one of the many reasons that you should never take a wild box turtle home.  There is sometimes cause to take a box turtle home with you: if it is injured or sick and will be returned to its origin after it has recovered or if you are 100% certain that it has lost its home due to development or other habitat loss.  In the later case, if you are not willing to care for it then you will need to find it a home in a nature center, zoo or wildlife park because it has no home to return to.

WELCOME to the new Earthshine Nature Blog!

Hello Nature Nerds!

Welcome to the new Earthshine Nature Programs (ENP) blog site.  Here you will be able to keep up with the current events as they happen at ENP.  Things you may see here on this blog will include but are not in any way limited to:

Turtle Tracks updates–follow in the tracks of our radio transmittered box turtles Catherine, Jimmy and Mrs. Bones (and Mr. Bones if we ever find him).

Snake Tracks updates–follow the trails of our radio transmittered Timber Rattlesnakes Utsanati and Zoe.

Keep up with the goings-on in the nature center.

Follow in some of Naturalist Steve’s travels and adventures in the field and in the classroom.

View new Wild Adventures with Steve videos as soon as they are posted to our Youtube.com site.

View new photos as soon as they are posted to our website.

Lear about special events where we will be presenting or that we will be hosting so that you can mark your calenders and attend.

So please follow our blog today and learn some great nature nerdy knowledge:-)

See you out there…Stevo

“Survivors seem to function best when peril is at hand”  –Jimmy Buffett