Like many animals at this time of year, the turtles are active and are getting busy reproducing. I saw this Painted Turtle sunning on a log in a quiet corner of Lake Wicwas.
Turtles don't soak in the sun just to feel good; there is important physiological value to their sessions in the sun. Jen Esten and Jon Waage, authors of The Nature of Pleasant Lake newsletter, wrote about turtles recently:
Being cold blooded, turtles need to sunbathe to elevate body temperature which in turn raises metabolic rate. Sunbathing also periodically dries their shells, helping control mold. Rocks and logs are safe places to get some sun. In addition to the sun’s warmth, they need the UVB rays to produce Vitamin D3 for processing calcium required for shell and bone growth. UVA rays help with several body functions. Sunning spots can get crowded! Allowing fallen trees to stay in the lake helps. These turtles feed on aquatic plants, algae and small aquatic invertebrates and fish. Young turtles are mostly meat eaters but become more vegetarian as they age. They can live for 30 years or more!
We have a healthy painted turtle population in Wicwas even though a lot of their eggs are dug up and eaten by various predators before they hatch. This excavated turtle nest was beside a trail in the Hamlin Town Forest this week.
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| Leathery egg shells left by a predator that consumed their contents. |
Every year I find one of two of these dug up nests, often right on the shoulder of roads near water bodies. Sometimes I even come across a mom laying her eggs. This good size snapper was right on the side of Chemung Road at the Chemung State Forest.
| A female snapping turtle laying her eggs a few years ago. |
This baby painted turtle was found this week by Lindsey Duggan:
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| Photo by Lindsey Duggan |
If turtles are just laying eggs now, how can we see baby turtles already? Well, painted turtles that are laid in late summer can overwinter underground after hatching, and emerge in the spring when the ground warms up.
What's even more unusual is that she also found a baby snapping turtle.
Snapping turtles don't usually have the same wintering trait as their painted cousins - even if eggs are laid in late summer, snapper eggs usually hatch the same year. But according to MassWildlife, they sometimes do overwinter in the nest, and that is likely how that baby turtle emerged in early June. Another possibility is that it did leave the nest late last fall and immediately dug into the bottom of the lake for the winter.
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One morning this week I saw a lot of commotion in the leaves of a maple tree just after sunrise, so I took a moment to see what was in there - it was a Gray Squirrel.
| A gray squirrel amidst the maple leaves. |
It was very focused on some activity, running up and down the branches, stopping here and there to chew on something. I waited for it to come to the end of branch so I could get a good look to see what it was up to - it was munching on maple seeds!
| The double winged "helicopter" seeds of a maple tree are called samaras - a latin name for a seed. |
Later in the summer each blossom will produce a large, hard blue fruit - that is, assuming a friendly pollinator does its part!
The fruit is inedible by people though many animals can and do eat them.
I'll close with the loon update. The LPC summer biologist came to survey the lake this week.
| Nicole, our summer loon biologist. |
We observed the northern loon nest - it's a well hidden nest.
| Can you see the loon in there? |
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