Title: Turtles of the Santa Fe River
1Turtles of the Santa Fe River
- Gerald R. Johnston, Ph.D.
- Santa Fe College
2What is the Santa Fe River Turtle Project?
- Cooperative effort by scientists and students
- Study and promote conservation of native turtles
- Santa Fe River drainage
3- Goals of the SFRTP
- Describe the Santa Fe River turtle assemblage
- species composition
- relative abundance of species
- distribution of each species
- Test hypotheses ? factors affecting patterns of
distribution - Assess health of populations
- Establish long-term monitoring program
- Public education
- Long-term persistence of entire turtle assemblage
4Study Sites
T
T
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T,S
T,S
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T,S
T trapping
S snorkeling
5Trapping
6Snorkeling
7Measuring
8Marking
9- Preliminary Summary
- 10 native species
- 67 of Floridas freshwater species
- 2 Florida Species of Special Concern
- Alligator Snapping Turtle (Macrochelys
temminckii) - Suwannee Cooter (Pseudemys concinna suwanniensis)
- Uneven distribution throughout river
- Detailed description of River Rise assemblage
- 250 turtles / km
- 640 kg / km
- Generally healthy populations
- Several threats
-
10Suwannee Cooter (Pseudemys concinna suwanniensis)
Species of Special Concern (FFWCC) Abundant
River Rise Ginnie Springs Herbivore Riverine Sex
ual dimorphism
11Suwannee Cooter Look-alikes
Florida Red-Bellied Turtle (Pseudemys nelsoni)
Florida Cooter (Pseudemys floridana)
Rare Herbivore
Rare Carnivore ? Herbivore
12Yellow-Bellied Slider (Trachemys scripta scripta)
Common 2nd most abundant basking
turtle Omnivore Sexual dimorphism Unique
population habitat geographic location
13Yellow-Bellied Slider (T. s. scripta) native
Red-Eared Slider (T. s. elegans) non-native
Hybrid (scripta x elegans) genetic pollution
14Loggerhead Musk Turtle (Sternotherus minor)
Common Musk Turtle (Sternotherus odoratus)
Striped Mud Turtle (Kinosternon baurii)
Abundant Durophagous
Rare Omnivore
Rare Omnivore
15Florida Softshell (Apalone ferox)
Rare Carnivore Sexual dimorphism
16Bush hook
17Florida Snapping Turtle (Chelydra serpentina)
Absent - locally abundant Omnivore
18Alligator Snapping Turtle (Macrochelys temminckii)
Species of Special Concern (FFWCC) Rare
common Omnivore Unique
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20Population Size Structure in OLeno State Park
21- What is next?
- Continued intensive sampling
- Rum Island Ginnie Springs
- Camp Kulaqua
- River Rise Preserve State Park
- Basking survey Suwannee Cooter
- Trapping survey Alligator Snapping Turtle
- Radiotelemetry 2 snapping turtle species
- New Florida harvest regulations?!
22Florida Turtle Harvest Update (Proposed Rule)
- Ban commercial take or sale of wild freshwater
turtles - Prohibit collection of imperiled species
- Prohibit collection of species the look similar
to imperiled species - Prohibit collection of eggs
- Allow take of 1 fw turtle/day/person from wild
for non-commercial use - Prohibit transport of more than 1 turtle per day
- Allow tightly controlled collection by farmers
for breeding purposes - April 15 meeting commissioners consider draft
rule - June meeting rule (if approved) advertised for
final hearing - Public comments any time during process
- testify at commission meetings
- turtles_at_MyFWC.com
23- What can you do?
- Support proposed FFWCC harvest laws
- Be vigilant
- Educate the public
- Participate in research
- Additional ideas
24Acknowledgments
SFC Herpetology Club Rebecca Cox Scott
Holznagel Jennifer Johnston Anthony
Lau Wes Oehmig Eric Suarez Travis
Thomas Steffi Affron (Camp Kulaqua) Ben Atkinson
(UF) Kevin Enge (FFWCC) Dale Kendrick
(OLeno/River Rise S.P.) Yurii Kornilev
(UF) Kenney Krysko (FLMNH) Joe Mitchell (Mitchell
Ecol. Serv.) Paul Moler (FFWCC) Max Nickerson
(FLMNH) Dan Pearson (FL DEP) Perran Ross
(UF) Morgan Tyrone (OLeno/River Rise S.P.) Jim
Wood (Santa Fe Canoe Outpost) Phil Younts (Camp
Kulaqua)
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