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"Herps of the Southeast"
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25Mississippi
River, LA |
Featured Herp
Alligator Snapping Turtle
(Macroclemys temminckii) |
Alligator
Snapping Turtle
(Macroclemys temminckii)
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Alligator Snapper
the largest freshwater turtle species in the U.S. |
ALLIGATOR SNAPPING
TURTLE:
MAGNIFICENT BEAST
PROTECTED FROM FEAST**
by John B. Jensen
Georgia Department of Natural
Resources
**The
following account is a true story. Some names have been changed to protect
the not-so innocent. One turtle was harmed in the making of this story.
Summer mornings often
find many herpetologists “in the field” studying their cold-blooded
species of interest. Unfortunately, that was not the case for me on July
17, 1997. Faced with what seemed to be an insurmountable stack of
deadline-ridden paperwork, I was completely office-bound. As the principal
herpetologist for the Georgia Department of Natural Resources’ Nongame-Endangered
Wildlife Program, however, I must also be available for other unexpected
duties when working at my office in Forsyth.
Frequent public assistance phone calls, usually snake “crises”,
are par for the course, but one particular call that day was quite
unexpected.
Mr. "Catfish" Trotline, a fisherman from
Southwest Georgia, called to inform me not of the
fish, but rather the turtle, he had caught a few days earlier.
A 57 pound “loggerhead” (local vernacular for the alligator
snapping turtle) fell for his one of his baited hooks set in Kinchafoonee
Creek. This particular turtle
had a metal tag attached to one of its feet and Mr. Trotline correctly
reasoned that someone with the DNR put that tag there and would be
interested in knowing about the catch.
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The
turtle, or Number 119 as he was affectionately known, was a male turtle first caught
farther
downstream in the Flint River during a 1989 status survey of this
threatened species. I was very pleased to get the capture information
on No. 119, which would certainly help add to
the limited knowledge of alligator snapping turtle movements and growth.
Interestingly, over the course of eight years, this turtle gained
32 pounds and moved upstream several kilometers into a tributary of the
Flint. I thanked Mr. Trotline for being so kind to inform me of his catch and asked if he had
already released it. To say the least, I was quite unprepared for his answer - “No, I ate it.”
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I thought – “How could he possibly tell me this?” After all, the alligator snapping turtle is a protected species
and Mr. Trotline was openly telling a state biologist with the Endangered
Wildlife Program of his illegal feast! Clearly, "Catfish"
Trotline was not aware
of the alligator snapper's status and since he only meant well by calling us, he was pardoned.
Alligator snapping turtles were once highly prized for their meat. Old-timers
professed that there are seven different flavors of meat on a single
turtle (one of them must be chicken, I assume). Many freshwater turtle
species were eaten, but 'gator snappers could provide a much greater
quantity of meat than others and thus were especially favored. During the
1960s and 1970s, Campbell’s, and certainly others, even produced a
canned turtle soup. It was this fact that eventually led to the decline and threatened status of the
alligator snapper. |
Commercial turtle trapping operations strongly
focused on this species since it was easy to catch and its enormous size
ensured good earnings for the trappers that sold meat at per pound rates.
The removal of so many large, mature alligator snappers from the
rivers and streams of the southeastern Gulf Coastal Plain caused a huge
population crash in many areas, requiring state agencies to prohibit
commercial harvest.
The largest freshwater turtle in the Western Hemisphere, the alligator snapping turtle can reach
250 pounds or more and have a shell nearly one yard in length. Alligator
snappers look quite pre-historic, with three jagged ridges on the carapace, a massive head with powerful hooked jaws, bear-like claws,
and a long scaly tail. On the floor of its mouth is a pink, fleshy structure that is unique to this
species. The worm-like process is wiggled and twitched while the turtle lies otherwise motionless
under the water with its mouth wide-open. This action lures small fish within striking distance of its lightning-quick jaws.
Actually, fish are only one component of a highly
opportunistic and varied diet that includes smaller turtles, mussels,
birds, muscadine grapes, palmetto berries, acorns, and carrion (and
fishhooks).
Humans very rarely see alligator snapping turtles,
except those people who purposely pursue the turtles, such as biologists and trappers.
However, many people misidentify their smaller cousin, the common
snapping turtle, as an alligator snapper. Common snapping turtles often
travel across land from one aquatic habitat to another, which puts them in
view of humans much more frequently.
Conversely, alligator snappers never voluntarily leave the water,
except nesting females, which rarely stray more than a few yards beyond
the high-water line.
Today, even biologists rarely see alligator snappers.
In an effort to evaluate current populations of this species in
Georgia, I, along with other colleagues and volunteers, conducted status
surveys in the major stream systems of Georgia within the species’
range. Using live traps and snorkeling searches, we did in fact find
'gator snappers, but certainly
not in the numbers we had hoped. One river, the Suwannee, yielded no captures or sightings of this spectacular
creature, despite seemingly ideal habitat. Clearly, commercial trapping in
the past left this and many other Georgia streams with very depressed
populations.
Hopefully, with protection measures in place preventing
commercial harvest of this species in Georgia and elsewhere, this species
will make a successful comeback, much the way its namesake, the American
Alligator, did following over-hunting and subsequent protection. However, building on the lesson learned from that phone call in
July of 1997, we obviously need to make the public more aware of the
threatened status of the magnificent alligator snapping turtle.
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Alligator Snapping Turtle Fact
Sheet (by Bob Reed)
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