Get involved

Bruce Peninsula National Park

Volunteers installing a turtle box
Park staff and volunteers work together to protect turtle populations within the park.
© Willy Waterton

Become a Citizen Scientist!

If you're interested in protecting turtle populations within Bruce Peninsula National Park, join our team of citizen scientists – the Turtle Trackers! Get firsthand experience monitoring turtle nests and collecting data, meet new people, and make a difference.

Who can join? 

Anyone. All you need is a passion for conservation!

How much of a time commitment will it be? 

Our volunteers must be able to commit to one 3-hour monitoring shift per week. Monitoring takes place mornings and evenings from approximately mid-May through to early July, and again from mid-August through to the end of September. You can volunteer once a week, or every day - it's up to you!

A nesting box with baby snapping turtles emerging
Two volunteers release baby snapping turtles in to a marsh

The most exciting moment of the season is the emergence of hatchlings from the protected nests!

What will I be doing?

The Turtle Trackers

During the spring, female turtles are searching for suitable nesting sites to lay their eggs. The Turtle Trackers monitor “hotspots” within the park for nesting activity. When a nesting turtle (or recently created nest) has been found, a protective cage is installed over top of it. This protects the fragile turtle eggs from being eaten by animals such as raccoons and skunks.

In late summer and early fall, hatchling turtles are beginning to emerge from their nests. The Turtle Trackers monitor protected nests to release hatchling turtles and ensure they make it to suitable habitat safely.

A snake resting in the grass
By submitting species observations, you can contribute to the collective data on reptile and amphibian activity in the area.

The data collected from our citizen science program helps us to better understand nesting locations and turtle activity within the park. Monitoring and protecting both nesting and hatchling turtles is crucial to the success of the overall population.

For more information or to join our citizen science team, contact: pc.r2r.pc@canada.ca

Report Your Sightings

If you see a turtle, snake, or frog crossing the road or on a trail (or one that has been killed), please use the Ontario Reptile and Amphibian Atlas app to report the species, as well as when and where you saw it. 

If you find an injured reptile or amphibian, please call the Ontario Turtle Conservation Centre, at: 705-741-5000.

 

Going Home - The Turtle Trackers

Transcript

Parks Canada Logo


Narrator: It's a very exciting time at Bruce Peninsula National Park.

A Parks Canada employee measures and weighs a baby turtle.

Tricia: In the fall is hatchling season, the best time of year. [LAUPHS] [MUSIC]

Title card - Going Home: A Turtle Trackers Story

A container filled with wriggling baby turtles.

Narrator: These are the first turtles ever incubated for the park's "road to recovery" program.

A container has it's lid removed, revealing a makeshift nest filled with a clutch of turtle eggs.

Tricia: Once all the turtles from the clutch or the nest have hatched we weigh them, we measure them, we make sure they're doing okay.

A baby turtle hatches from it's egg.

Narrator: These are baby painted and snapping turtles both at-risk species in Ontario.

Baby snapping turtles swim in a container filled with water and rocks. An employee places another baby turtle into the container.

They're here because their mom's nested so close to a road the turtles would likely have died had they not been rescued. But finding all these turtle eggs was not an easy task. To get the eggs, park staff relied on the help of some dedicated volunteers: The Turtle Trackers

A volunteer in a safety vest steps out of a car with a turtle decal, then walks down the side of the road.

Rod: Turtle nests and their eggs are particularly prone to predation from animals like raccoons and skunks so in the spring we watch for turtles that are laying eggs and we put a protective box over them to keep the predators out.

A volunteer closes the lid of a turtle nesting box placed on the side of the road.

Sometimes we can't put a box on them because they're so close to a road. Those eggs are collected and put in an incubator

The volunteer gets back into the car.

[Door opens, Car chime] [Door closes, truck passes] Narrator: The turtle trackers are part of a comprehensive program the park has undertaken to help at-risk reptiles and amphibians on the Bruce Peninsula recover from the deadly impacts of roads.

A turtle walks up to an eco-passage underneath the pavement to cross the road safely.

Tricia: We have installed ecopassages and wildlife exclusion fencing in key areas where road mortality was a problem so that reptiles amphibians could cross the road safely.

A volunteer checks a turtle nesting box.

Narrator: While fencing and ecopassages are reducing road mortality they're not practical everywhere and they don't help with nest predation. That's where the Turtle Trackers come in.

A snapping turtle sits at the side of the road as cars rush by.

[Car passes] Since only about 1% of hatchlings make it to maturity every baby turtle that volunteers keep safe is key to their recovery.

A painted turtle watches as a truck drives by.

Tricia: The more nests we protect that increases our odds to help these animals. because so little of them survive to adulthood. Narrator: In the fall, after months underground the eggs protected by the turtle trackers are ready to hatch.

A volunteer opens a nesting box to check for hatched baby turtles.

The volunteers check each nesting box three times a day. Tricia: They check the boxes, looking for hatchlings emerging.

A volunteer reaches into a nesting box to remove a baby turtle. The turtle walks across his palm.

Rod: Now have you got four legs there - yes you do!

A volunteer walks into a wetland area carrying a container. He releases the baby turtle, which then crawls into the water.

Tricia: And once they do they take them out and help them safely to the wetland that they came from. Narrator: While handling wildlife in the park is usually not allowed the Turtle Trackers have received training for these special circumstances. [Giggle]

A larger group of volunteers walks into the wetland with more baby turtles to release.

Rod: These little guys have a chance where in the past they wouldn't have had no chance at all. [ok, it's a little mucky there!] Narrator: When it comes time to release the incubated turtles, everyone's invited.

A young volunteer places a baby turtle onto a rock.

[There you go!] Mairin: It felt like holding a little pancake! [Just pick on? Yeah!] Mandy: This is my first time ever touching a baby turtle like this is what I've been working up for so this is absolutely incredible.

A baby turtle is placed into the grass.

[You're free!] Rod: People would look at me and say he's probably a crusty old guy.

A baby turtle is gently placed onto a rock.

But when there's little turtles like that around I'm just a bit pile of mush. Tricia: We have 290 eggs in the incubator and we've protected over a hundred nests in the area, so that's thousands of young turtles.

A baby turtle swims through the water after being released.

We would never have been able to do it without all the community and all the volunteers.

A volunteer smiles as she looks down at a baby turtle she's released begins to swim away.

Mandy: It's early mornings and it's a commitment but it's so worth it. It's worth everything.

A baby turtle dives underwater.

To learn more about the Turtle Trackers or the On The Road to Recovery project, visit parkscanada.gc.ca/bruce-recovery

Credits:

Parks Canada logo.

© Her Majesty the Queen in Right of Canada, represented by Parks Canada, 2020.

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