How Baby Turtles Survive Cold Winters

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RuXPiN

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HOW DO BABY TURTLES SURVIVE COLD WINTERS?

by Whit Gibbons

18 January 2004



Temperature is the most obvious and easily measured environmental factor influencing the lives of plants and animals and is therefore of great interest to ecologists. Every species living in the temperate zone deals with winter cold. Birds fly south as winter approaches. Mammals add a layer of body fat when cold weather arrives. Trees lose their leaves before they freeze. Turtles, one of the most conspicuous animals in warm weather, have special ways to deal with winter.

What happened to the turtles you saw basking on logs or rocks in the sun during spring, summer, and fall? They have disappeared, but where did they go, and why? Turtles are reptiles and their surroundings determine their body temperature. At body temperatures of about 40 to 50 degrees F, most reptiles become sluggish, stop eating, and seek hiding places to get safely through the winter.

Many aquatic turtles go into the bottom mud or under the bank where the water is cold but does not freeze. An advantage reptiles have over most mammals is that their metabolism drops with their body temperature, meaning that they require less oxygen. Some turtles can stay underwater for days at a time without taking a breath, as long as the water stays cold.

Recently born baby turtles have a different strategy. Turtles lay their eggs on land, usually by digging a hole in dirt or sand and then covering the nest. Most turtle eggs hatch in autumn, but the hatchlings often do not leave the nest until the following spring, a year or more after the eggs are laid. This phenomenon, known as overwintering in the nest, occurs worldwide among many different kinds of turtles.

Overwintering may sound like a reasonable way for a helpless baby turtle in mild-wintered Alabama or Florida to pass its first cold spells and avoid predators. But what do baby turtles do in Canada, Michigan, and Minnesota, where painted turtle hatchlings are entombed only a few inches beneath the soil for the winter months? Even in an underground nest, soil temperatures drop as low as 25 degrees F. Most animals deal with these extremely low winter temperatures by seeking a warmer place. Not so baby painted turtles.

In Michigan, hatchling turtles that overwinter on land differ in body composition from those that leave the nest during late summer. The eggs of overwintering hatchlings have proportionally more body fat and oils than do the eggs of turtles that leave the nest early. The overwintering baby turtles can survive from late summer to the following spring on their own fat reserves, without eating. This added energy easily gets them through a long, cold winter.

Some hatchling turtles are also believed to be capable of producing antifreeze compounds. Hatchling painted turtles exposed to subfreezing temperatures produce significantly higher levels of glucose in the blood than do those kept at normal temperatures. The glucose and other body products may function as a form of antifreeze, although how the process works is unknown.

An even more important discovery is that some baby turtles can survive when more than half their internal body water freezes. The painted turtle is one of the highest vertebrate life forms known in which the freezing of body fluids is tolerated during hibernation. This does not mean that other animals are incapable of surviving such an assault, only that scientists have not yet documented the phenomenon.

If you go for a walk around the edge of a lake this winter, consider that adult turtles are lying dormant beneath the lake's surface and that possibly baby turtles are on land beneath your feet. Both the adults and hatchlings have a good chance of enduring anything winter has to offer, in the North as well as the South. Hibernating underwater by the adults is not particularly unusual for a reptile, but the phenomenon of overwintering in the nest by the hatchlings demonstrates how intricate the natural history and versatility of native wildlife can be. We still have a lot to learn about how the most common of animals around us survive in the natural world.



If you have an environmental question or comment, email ecoviews@srel.edu.

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davo;567168; said:
thats really interesting. is this new information?
just found it on the web, yea I alway wondered how they make it too, in minnesota you can imagine the water temp, ice is a foot thick on the lakes the ground is froze so solid machinery cant even penetrate it. Pretty amazing little critters
 
RuXPiN;567175; said:
just found it on the web, yea I alway wondered how they make it too, in minnesota you can imagine the water temp, ice is a foot thick on the lakes the ground is froze so solid machinery cant even penetrate it. Pretty amazing little critters

Yeah, turtles are pretty amazing animals. Speaking of MN ice, I have seen semi-trucks driving across lakes in Orr during the winter.
 
softturtle;567202; said:
Yeah, turtles are pretty amazing animals. Speaking of MN ice, I have seen semi-trucks driving across lakes in Orr during the winter.
no, but i have seen lots of drunken fisherman driving around the frozen lakes, remember the movie "grumpy old me" love that movie, thats pretty much all the action on lakes in minnesota, no trucks though. i live in the sw corner, 7 miles from iowa, 60 miles from sioux falls south dakota. middle of no where, but 3 blocks from a lake
 
coolest article on turtles ever
 
MDC_Leviathan;567199; said:
Good info. Now I'm better equipped to deal with people that insist on keeping baby turtles they find because "they can't survive the cold winters."

That is good information to have in such an argument. But I think it's a little depressing that people believe animals are incapable of surviving the winters in their natural habitats. If that were true, there wouldn't be any of them left.
 
people think that cause they are small or "babies" that they wont survive, and i guess before i read this i figured most of them wouldnt survive either.
 
People always think that baby or small animals are so helpless, when we are one of the only animals to take care of our young through to adulthood. We're the most helpless of them all.

great article though I always wondered what turtles do in cold places, here in Florida they might just go to sleep for the three days that its cold lol.
 
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