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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.
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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.

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News & Events

Species Spotlight: North American Wood Turtle

  • December 27, 2023

Our final #TurtleOfTheWeek for 2023 is the striking North American Wood Turtle!

The Wood Turtle can be found in the Northeast and Great Lakes regions of the United States and parts of southeastern Canada. There, this turtle stands out from the pack with bright orange, pink, red, or yellow skin and well-defined shell scutes, as though they were carved from wood. It inhabits water-rich areas like riparian woodlands, moist meadows, vegetated floodplains, and cool, clear-to-relatively clear streams, creeks, and rivers.

For much of the year they are obligated to an aquatic lifestyle where they breed and brumate (reptilian hibernation). During the other, they move between terrestrial habitats, sometimes many kilometers per year. During summer heat spells or drought, this turtle often returns to the water and its immediate surroundings.

Photo by Jordan Gray.

Once an abundant turtle, habitat fragmentation, alteration, and destruction, road and railroad mortality, increased predator populations, collection for the pet trade, and climate change, among other threats, have severely depleted, if not altogether extirpated, populations. Due to this, the North American Wood Turtle is regarded by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Red List as Endangered, and is now protected in every United States state and Canadian province in which they naturally occur, ranging in conservation status from a Species of Special Concern to Endangered.

The Wood Turtle is a key species in the AZA SAFE: American Turtle Program, which addresses the threat of illegal trade by assisting federal and state wildlife agency law enforcement officers in protecting native turtles and in developing procedures to return confiscated turtles to the wild.

Learn more about how you can help this species and others at the link in our bio!

Pictured: North American Wood Turtle (Glyptemys insculpta)
IUCN Red List Status: Endangered

?: Jordan Gray

Header image by Miranda McCleaf.

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