• Menu
  • Skip to right header navigation
  • Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content

Turtle Guardians

  • SHOP
  • DONATE

Mobile Menu

  • About
    • Who Are Turtle Guardians?
    • Turtle Camp 2023
    • Our Partners & Supporters
    • Turtle Guardian Program Evaluation
    • The Land Between: Ontario’s Turtle Country
    • Our Centre – Contact Us
  • Helping Turtles
    • So you found a turtle…
    • 13 Ways to Help Turtles
    • Dapper Snappers
    • How Old is That Turtle?
    • Ways We Are Reducing Threats
  • Learning Resources
    • TG Blogs
    • Reducing Threats
    • Turtle Facts
    • Turtle Identification
      • Parts of a Turtle
      • Blanding’s Turtle
      • Map Turtle
      • Painted Turtle
      • Snapping Turtle
      • Spiny Softshell Turtle
      • Spotted Turtle
      • Stinkpot Turtle/Musk Turtle
      • Wood Turtle
    • Turtle ID Quiz
    • Turtle Habitats
      • Lakes & Rivers
      • Ponds & Marshes
      • Swamps & Carrs
      • Bogs & Fens
    • School Curriculums
      • Turtle Guardians Curricula Videos
      • Intermediate (Grades 7-8)
      • Junior (Grades 4-6)
      • Primary (K-3) Grades
      • The Turtle Stories Platform
  • Volunteer
    • Help save Ontario’s turtles this summer!
    • Volunteer Reporting Forms
  • Other Ways You Can Help
    • Report A Sighting
    • Donate
    • Symbolically “Adopt” A Hatchling
    • Turtle Conservation Wish List
    • Shop
  • Member login
  •  
  • facebook
  • twitter
  • instagram
  • tiktok
  • SHOP
  • DONATE
  • About
    • Who Are Turtle Guardians?
    • Turtle Camp 2023
    • Our Partners & Supporters
    • Turtle Guardian Program Evaluation
    • The Land Between: Ontario’s Turtle Country
    • Our Centre – Contact Us
  • Helping Turtles
    • So you found a turtle…
    • 13 Ways to Help Turtles
    • Dapper Snappers
    • How Old is That Turtle?
    • Ways We Are Reducing Threats
  • Learning Resources
    • TG Blogs
    • Reducing Threats
    • Turtle Facts
    • Turtle Identification
      • Parts of a Turtle
      • Blanding’s Turtle
      • Map Turtle
      • Painted Turtle
      • Snapping Turtle
      • Spiny Softshell Turtle
      • Spotted Turtle
      • Stinkpot Turtle/Musk Turtle
      • Wood Turtle
    • Turtle ID Quiz
    • Turtle Habitats
      • Lakes & Rivers
      • Ponds & Marshes
      • Swamps & Carrs
      • Bogs & Fens
    • School Curriculums
      • Turtle Guardians Curricula Videos
      • Intermediate (Grades 7-8)
      • Junior (Grades 4-6)
      • Primary (K-3) Grades
      • The Turtle Stories Platform
  • Volunteer
    • Help save Ontario’s turtles this summer!
    • Volunteer Reporting Forms
  • Other Ways You Can Help
    • Report A Sighting
    • Donate
    • Symbolically “Adopt” A Hatchling
    • Turtle Conservation Wish List
    • Shop
  • Member login
  •  

Seeking Turtle Volunteers in Haliburton and Peterborough

March 24, 2021 Leave a Comment

It can take up to 60 years for one turtle to be replaced in nature. Turtles are keystone species that support entire ecosystems- and also the fish and wildlife within them.   Turtles cannot be relocated to new areas to repopulate areas as they imprint their home ranges when they are hatchlings and they cannot remake these "mind maps" of their feeding, hibernation and mating sites. When turtles travel in their home ranges, the younger turtles are eating carrion and other protein which helps to keep water free of harmful pathogens, and the older turtles are consuming seeds and vegetation, so as they walk to the next destination, they spread seeds which grow into new fish nurseries and habitats for wildlife. Without turtles in our environments, our health and wellbeing are at risk. Turtle populations are declining at unprecedented and unsustainable rates- It is estimated that more than 50% of turtles have been lost in Ontario already.  The major threat to turtles is road traffic and resulting injury or mortality. This summer Turtle Guardians are partnering with Peterborough and Haliburton County Road Departments to enable volunteers to monitor high mortality/road-crossing areas; and assist turtles in trouble, in these zones...saving essential species in our communities while building skills to help turtles everywhere! Training, including turtle ecology, safety protocols, identification, and safe-handling skills will be provided to volunteers. If you are interested in volunteering please visit our volunteering page to register

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Previous Post: « What the Phrag? All You Need to Know About Invasive Phragmites
Next Post: A New GoFundMe Campaign to Save Grace…and Others »

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Search

Site Navigation

  • Home
  • About
  • Events Calendar
  • Donate
  • Shop
  • How to Help Turtles
  • Learning Resources
  • Contact

Our Partners

Join Us at Turtle Stories

Contact Turtle Guardians by calling 705-457-1222 or texting 705-854-2888

Copyright © 2023 Turtle Guardians · Email Us · Privacy Policy

Site Development by TechnicalitiesPlus Inc.

 

Loading Comments...