Skip to content

Join us for Turtle Month!

Turtle Month 2025
  • Turtle Survival Center
  • Annual Symposium 2025
  • News & Events
  • Shop
  • Contact Us
  • Turtle Survival Center
  • Annual Symposium 2025
  • News & Events
  • Shop
  • Contact Us
  • About Us
  • What We Do
  • What You Can do
Donate
  • About Us
    • Who We Are
    • Staff & Board
    • Publications
    • Financials & Policies
    • Strategic Plan 2025
    • Contact Us
  • What We Do
    • Turtle Survival Center
    • Global Projects
    • Volunteer Science
    • Confiscation to Conservation
    • Annual Symposium 2025
    • News & Events
  • What You Can Do
    • Explore Turtles & Tortoises Around the World
    • Virtual Outreach Experience
    • Donate
    • Become a Member
    • Corporate Partnership
    • Drink Beer. Save Turtles.®
  • Shop
  • Contact Us
  • About Us
    • Who We Are
    • Staff & Board
    • Publications
    • Financials & Policies
    • Strategic Plan 2025
    • Contact Us
  • What We Do
    • Turtle Survival Center
    • Global Projects
    • Volunteer Science
    • Confiscation to Conservation
    • Annual Symposium 2025
    • News & Events
  • What You Can Do
    • Explore Turtles & Tortoises Around the World
    • Virtual Outreach Experience
    • Donate
    • Become a Member
    • Corporate Partnership
    • Drink Beer. Save Turtles.®
  • Shop
  • Contact Us
  • Who We Are
  • Staff & Board
  • Publications
  • Financials & Policies
  • Strategic Plan 2025
  • Contact Us
  • Careers

Why Turtles?

Found around the world in rivers, deserts, jungles, and our own backyards, it’s easy to assume tortoises and freshwater turtles will always be here. But the very traits that once helped them survive render them vulnerable to extinction today.
Support Our Work

Our Initiatives

  • Turtle Survival Center
  • Global Projects
  • Volunteer Science
  • Confiscation to Conservation
  • Annual Symposium

Our Programs

Protecting the world’s most endangered tortoises and freshwater turtles

We All Play a Role.

To save turtles, we all play a role. Every day, tortoises and freshwater turtles around the globe face pressing threats. Your support equips us to support species where and how they need us most.

Turtles are ancient and remarkable creatures who deserve a champion. When you stand with us, you help ensure their continued survival. Together, we can create a world with zero turtle extinctions.

Support Our Work

Learn & Discover

  • Explore Turtles & Tortoises Around the World
  • Virtual Outreach Experience

Make an Impact

  • Donate
  • Become a Member
  • Corporate Partnership
  • Drink Beer. Save Turtles®
_50A1654_Hawthorne_Fanatee_11-18-2023 _50A1236-Edit_Hawthorne_Fanatee_11-18-2023 (1) _50A1153-Edit_Hawthorne_Fanatee_11-18-2023

Program

Volunteer Science

Conservation Action

The Turtle Survival Alliance Volunteer Science program is an undergraduate research experience/citizen scientist volunteer program directed by academic and non-academic professionals and committed to long-term turtle population monitoring.

Spanning more than 20 years, this program is home to the 2nd longest ongoing study of turtles inhabiting a Florida freshwater spring system, and one of the largest long-term turtle population studies conducted in the United States.

Today, this program conducts long-term studies through capture-mark-recapture to examine the population dynamics of species and species assemblages of turtles across 19 active study sites

in Florida, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Texas, and Washington.

This initiative provides field volunteer opportunities for Turtle Survival Alliance members, serves as a training and outreach function, and produces peer-reviewed publications of its findings that can assist local, regional, state, and federal agencies with courses of action to protect wild turtles and their habitats.

Sustained efforts of the Turtle Survival Alliance Volunteer Science program are important because turtles are long-lived organisms and provide a valuable ecological role in the environments in which they live.

Defining life history traits such as survivorship, population estimates, density, biomass, and sex ratios in wild populations over long periods of time is critical to formulating and implementing turtle conservation and management plans, as well as detecting population declines or other trends. Through long-term population monitoring and robust data sets, the Alliance and its partners can expand the project scope into under-studied aspects of these species’ life histories, as well as provide informed, science-based recommendations to wildlife resource managers and other landscape stakeholders.

Turtle Survival Alliance supports Bog Turtle research and conservation efforts of Mike Knoerr and JJ Apodaca at multiple wetlands in North Carolina through the Bern Tryon Southern Bog Turtle Fund. This project performs Bog Turtle population research, assessments, and monitoring through the use of mark-recapture, eDNA technology, and innovative camera-trap design, population modeling, and works to increase Bog Turtle population sizes through maintaining electric fencing around nesting areas and locating and covering Bog Turtle nests with cages to safeguard them from predators, to prevent predation of the eggs.

For more information, or to volunteer, contact Jordan Gray: jgray@turtlesurvival.org

Turtle Survival Alliance

Volunteer Science Membership: $50

To participate in the Volunteer Science surveys, you must be a Volunteer Science member at this level. Volunteer Science participants will receive a T-shirt with their membership. This membership helps fund the supplies and cost of these surveys. Learn more about the Turtle Survival Alliance Volunteer Science program here.

Become a Volunteer Science Member

Key Species

Key Species

Glyptemys muhlenbergii

Bog Turtle

Critically Endangered

Read More

Macrochelys temminckii

Alligator Snapping Turtle

Vulnerable

Read More
No posts found

Want to help naftrg?

Support

Your generosity will help us protect threatened species today.
Give Today

NAFTRG

Lead Partners and Supporters

Bluff City Turtles, City of New Braunfels, Disney’s Animal Kingdom, Felburn Group, Flagler College, Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, Florida Park Service, Freed-Hardeman University, Friends of the Wekiva River, Horse Creek Wildlife Sanctuary and Animal Refuge, Houston Parks and Recreation Department, Jacksonville University, Memorial Park Conservancy, Nature Conservancy of North Carolina, Nonconnah Creek Conservancy, North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission Northeast Wood Turtle Working Group, Orange County Parks and Recreation, Partners for Bull Creek, Peninsula College, Pennsylvania Fish and Boat Commission, Pennsylvania Natural Heritage Program, Santa Fe College, SWCA Environmental Consultants, Tangled Bank Conservation, TC Energy, Tennessee Wildlife Resources Agency, Texas Parks and Wildlife Department, The County Line, theTurtleRoom, United States Fish and Wildlife Service, United States Geological Survey, University of South Florida, Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife

Program Team

JJ Apodaca
Brian Butterfield
Jordan Gray
J. Brian Hauge
Tabitha Hootman
Michael Knoerr
Eric Munscher
Wayne Osborne
Joe Pignatelli
Andrew Walde
Andrew Weber
About Us
  • Who We Are
  • Staff & Board
  • Publications
  • Financials & Policies
  • Strategic Plan 2025
  • Contact Us
  • Careers
What We Do
  • Turtle Survival Center
  • Madagascar
  • NAFTRG
  • AZA SAFE
  • Annual Symposium 2025
What You Can Do
  • Explore Turtles & Tortoises
  • Virtual Outreach Experience
  • Become a Member
  • Drink Beer. Save Turtles.®
  • News & Events
Donate
Subscribe for Turtle Newsletter
© Copyright 2025. All Rights Reserved.

Privacy Policy

Subscribe for Turtle News

Subscribe to receive the Turtle Survival Alliance email newsletter and stay up-to-date on the latest in turtle conservation.