Endangered turtles in Columbia River Gorge get boost from state Fish & Wildlife biologists
May 14-With the help of volunteers and wildlife officials, the Oregon Zoo returned 22 endangered northwestern pond turtles to the Columbia River Gorge this week.
Washington Department of Fish & Wildlife biologists collected the turtles as hatchlings from sites in the Gorge last spring. From there, they were taken to the zoo's conservation lab, where wildlife experts provided heat lamps and plentiful food to help the turtles grow quickly.
"In a year, they grew to about the size of 3-year-old turtles," Jen Osburn Eliot, who oversees the zoo's turtle conservation program, said in a press release. "Head-starting the turtles in the lab gives them a much better chance of survival in the wild."
The northwestern pond turtle, also known as the western pond turtle, is listed as an endangered species in Washington and a sensitive species in Oregon. Starting in the 1990s, Fish & Wildlife officials discovered the number of northwestern pond turtles living in the wild was in sharp decline, with only around 150 of the turtles extant.
The state agency then began working with Oregon Zoo in Portland and Woodland Park Zoo in Seattle to catch, grow and release turtles.
Britton Ransford, communication manager for Fish & Wildlife's southwest region, said raising the hatchlings in a controlled environment for nine to 10 months lets the turtles grow large enough to avoid predation by bullfrogs and other animals.
"The bigger the turtle, the harder it is for a bullfrog to gobble it up," Eliot said in the release.
Although native to the eastern United States, the American bullfrog is an invasive species in Washington. The largest frog species on the continent, American bullfrogs can tip the scales at more than a pound. The frogs have been driving pond turtles and other small, vulnerable aquatic species to the brink of extinction, Eliot said.
"More than 1,600 northwestern pond turtles have been released at carefully selected, suitable habitat sites in the Columbia River Gorge since the program began in 1991," Ransford said.
Keepers prepare the turtles for life outdoors by giving them plenty of time outside to acclimate to changing temperatures, as well as adjusting their diet to mimic what they'll find in their new pond home.
Today, there are around 800 northwestern pond turtles in the wild. Nearly all are connected to the Fish & Wildlife/zoo programs.
"Every turtle we put back in a pond matters," Eliot said. "We need to do our part to keep the population going."
The Northwestern Pond Turtle Recovery Project is a collaborative effort by the Oregon Zoo, Woodland Park Zoo, Washington Department of Fish & Wildlife, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Friends of the Columbia River Gorge, Bonneville Power Administration, U.S. Forest Service and other partners.
This story was made possible by Community Funded Journalism, a project from The Columbian and the Local Media Foundation. Top donors include the Ed and Dollie Lynch Fund, Patricia, David and Jacob Nierenberg, Connie and Lee Kearney, Steve and Jan Oliva, The Cowlitz Tribal Foundation and the Mason E. Nolan Charitable Fund. The Columbian controls all content. For more information, visit columbian.com/cfj.
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