The Toronto Zoo along with Parks Canada, Toronto and Region Conservation Authority (TRCA), University of Toronto Scarborough (UTSC) and the Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry (OMNRF) are proud to announce an exciting new opportunity for members of our community at the Toronto Zoo. The new Blandingโ€™s Turtle Exhibit is now open in the Americas Pavilion for guests of the Toronto Zoo to see and experience. This new exhibit offers a turtleโ€™s-eye-view of one of the Toronto Zoo and Parks Canadaโ€™s most successful conservation programmes!

One of the Zooโ€™s well-known head-starting programmes involves the Blandingโ€™s turtles, a species that was about to disappear from the Rouge Valley, and now is being reintroduced into Rouge National Urban Park. Like the many other conservation breeding and release programmes at the Zoo, most of the work is done behind-the-scenes. Now, Zoo members and guests will have the opportunity to see these turtles firsthand in a new exhibit in the Americas Pavilion. This head-starting project was made possible with the support of many partners including Parks Canada, TRCA, UTSC and the OMNRF.

โ€œBy reintroducing Blandingโ€™s turtles to Rouge National Urban Park, Parks Canada is working with the Toronto Zoo to take significant action towards conserving and restoring a threatened species to important wetland habitat in the GTA,โ€ says Gary Anandasangaree, Member of Parliament for Scarboroughโ€“Rouge Park. โ€œParks Canada is a recognized leader in conservation. Through its Conservation and Restoration Program and other innovative initiatives, Parks Canada takes actions to preserve national protected areas and contribute to the recovery of species-at-risk, like the Blandingโ€™s turtle.โ€

โ€œBlandingโ€™s turtles are a flagship species representing a group of animals facing a variety of threats. Seven of eight turtle species in Ontario are at risk and need our help,โ€ says Robin Hale, Interim Chief Executive Officer, Toronto Zoo. โ€œThe Toronto Zooโ€™s new Blandingโ€™s Turtle Exhibit is a unique opportunity for our community to see these turtles and support our efforts to save species in our own backyard.โ€

This will be the fifth year Blandingโ€™s turtles โ€“ listed as endangered by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) and a provincially and nationally threatened species โ€“ will be released in the park. In June 2017, the same group of partners collaborated on the release of 49 baby Blandingโ€™s turtles in the Rouge. The programme, which began reintroducing baby Blandingโ€™s turtles in June 2014, has now reintroduced 116 baby Blandingโ€™s turtles in total into the wild, and this number will grow to 165 as of June 2018. The Blandingโ€™s turtle is a long-lived species, with a life span of up to 80 years, and has inhabited the Rouge Valley for thousands of years, though prior to 2014 its future was uncertain, with as few as six adult Blandingโ€™s turtles remaining.

These Blandingโ€™s turtles were rescued as eggs from non-viable nests in a stable source population in southern Ontario and have been raised in a protected environment at the Toronto Zoo for two years. Giving these turtles a โ€˜head-startโ€™ in life, the Zoo has raised them past their most vulnerable stages where they would otherwise have faced an increased chance of predation from animals like raccoons. The UTSC has joined this head-starting project and is assisting with long term monitoring of the released turtles. Parks Canada, the TRCA, the OMNRF, and the Toronto Zoo believe that this type of head-starting and reintroduction of the turtles, along with long term monitoring and ongoing habitat restoration, are keys to the speciesโ€™ survival in the Rouge National Urban Park.

CLICK HERE (http://www.torontozoo.com/press/2018/?pg=20180202) to report Native Frog, Toad and Turtle Sightings with the Adopt-A-Pond App!

After extensive design, testing and tweaking, the Toronto Zooโ€™s Adopt-A-Pond Programme is proud to announce the official launch of a new citizen science app that will take our Turtle Tally and FrogWatch programmes to the next level! The Toronto Zooโ€™s Adopt-A-Pond Wetland Conservation Programme works to design and deliver impactful conservation-focused research, restoration, and outreach that highlights the importance of saving Canadaโ€™s sensitive wetland species and their habitats. This app is the next step in reaching out to engage more Canadians in protecting local biodiversity through citizen science.

The Adopt-A-Pond App is fun and easy to use and, with you assisting our biologists, we can map where these threatened and endangered native species can be found. You can download this app through the IOS App Store and Android Google Play Store today!

CLICK HERE (http://www.torontozoo.com/crimestoppers/) to report turtle poaching, please contact Crime Stoppers.

The Toronto Zoo and TRCA began collecting information on and monitoring Blandingโ€™s turtles in the Rouge Valley in 2005. Environment Canada and the Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry provided funding, permits and in-kind support for Blandingโ€™s turtle monitoring in the Rouge Valley in previous years. With the area slated to become Canadaโ€™s first national urban park, Parks Canada has come on board and will continue to work on a long-term turtle monitoring program. Earth Rangers, an environmental conservation organization focused on engaging youth in the protection of nature, also provided support for a facility to house the turtle eggs and babies at the Toronto Zoo.

SOURCE: Toronto Zoo

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