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SREL
Herp Site
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"Herps of the Southeast"
Virtual Walk
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Stop
7
Savannah Wildlife Refuge (SC)
and Savannah (GA) |
Featured Herp
Diamondback Terrapin
(Malaclemys terrapin)
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As the East Aiken classes walk the South Carolina coast, just
about all of them are impressed with the Low Country beauty, particularly as they skirt
the salt marshes south of Charleston, view the live oaks on a few barrier islands, and
finally reach the inland pools of the
Savannah
National Wildlife Refuge near Savannah, GA. The
school arrives near Savannah on October 18, 1999.
Its likely that some of East Aikens students will one
day go on to become scientists. It is also likely that others will choose careers as
artists. We usually tend to think of the two fields as virtual opposites. After all
what could be more different than art and science? Perhaps in some cases that is
true. But, when it comes to the wonders of the natural world, might the disciplines not
have similar purpose?
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Terrapin shell |
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Slider and Otter
Bronze by: Carl McCleskey
(Exhibitor at Wildlife Expo) |
Heres the deal. Both art and science are built on creative
acts. Imagination, creativity, and passion are crucial qualities for artists and
scientists alike. An artist "captures" the essence of a diamondback terrapin,
whether in photo, on canvas, or in bronze. The audience viewing the work, at some level,
comes to "know" the terrapin, and the emotional response to this natural beauty
may result in a concern for the well being of terrapins. A scientist captures (literally)
terrapins in a different way, and studies and measures and weighs and marks them, and then
teaches others of terrapin natural history so that the turtles are appreciated on a
rational level. Whether an audience is more impacted by the bronze sculptures of artists
at the Charleston Southeastern Wildlife
Exposition or drawings by artists from the
Savannah College of
Art and Design,
or the science of a wildlife biologist probably depends on the individual. The turtles
probably dont carethey just hope the conservation
message gets out one way or another!
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| Art and Science "
the act of creation (lies) in the
discovery of a hidden likeness. The scientist or the artist takes two facts or experiences
which are separate; he finds in them a likeness which had not been seen before; and he
creates a unity by showing the likeness.
The great artist works as devotedly to
uncover the implications of his vision as does the great scientist. They grow, they haunt
his thought, and their most inspired flash is the end of a lifetime of silent
exploration."
J. Bronowski in Science and Human Values |
Diamondback Terrapins
(Malaclemys terrapin)

Malaclemys terrapin |
Diamondback terrapins inhabit the salt marshes and mangroves
along most of the eastern and Gulf coasts, on the Atlantic Coast from Massachusetts to the
Florida Keys, and along the Gulf Coast to Texas. One of the major research sites for
terrapins is in South Carolina, between Charleston and Beaufort. Researchers from the
Savannah River Ecology Laboratory (click here to learn more about SREL
Herpetological Studies) first began studying diamondback terrapins on the South
Carolina coast in 1983.
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Download
Diamondback terrapin Fact Sheet |
Over the past 16 years 1274 turtles have been captured, measured,
marked, and released back to their home tidal creek. Many of those turtles have been
recaptured one or more times, allowing the researchers to better understand the
terrapins growth rate, habitat need, dietary preferences, and movement patterns.
[For some idea of how these studies are conducted, check out the photos (Photos of
diamondback terrapin research at Kiawah Island).]
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A few of the observations of this
study are:
- Many more males were captured than females (758 individuals to
502).
- No babies and few juveniles were captured, meaning they probably
use a different habitat than the adult turtles.
- Turtles rarely moved from one tidal creek to anothereven to
creeks only a short distance away. Even after Hurricane Hugo tossed boats around from one
side of an island to another, the turtles were still in their same creeks!
- The turtle population in one tidal creek has virtually gone
extinct, coincident with the increase in recreational crab trapping. Small turtles can be
trapped in crab traps, and when this happens they usually drown.
The results of the study, in conjunction with similar studies
elsewhere, show that there will be challenges facing diamondback terrapin populations
throughout its range. [See more details on the species that is the
Maryland
state reptile.] As coastal areas become more and more populated (with humans), people
will need to become more aware of the needs of the turtles if diamondback terrapins are to
persist as one of the beauties of the Low Country.
Are people concerned? What can be done to help?
Check out the
project by Dr. Roger Wood in New Jersey
(Junior zoologists program).
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