06/09/2026
It's , time to shell-ebrate! 🐢
Here are some turt-ally rad facts in honor of these cold-blooded reptiles:
1️⃣ Turtles have been around since the days of the dinosaurs, with fossils dating back more than 220 million years.
2️⃣ The United States is a biodiversity hotspot for turtles, being home to more terrestrial and freshwater turtle species than any other country.
3️⃣ There is only one turtle species in the world known to spend its entire life in coastal, brackish marshlands: the diamondback terrapin (Malaclemys terrapin).
Florida is home to three diamondback terrapin subspecies found nowhere else on Earth: the Florida east coast terrapin, mangrove diamondback terrapin, and ornate diamondback terrapin.
These opportunistic feeders also play an important role in marsh ecosystems by consuming marsh periwinkle snails (Littoraria irrorata), which can graze vegetation down to mud and make marshlands less effective at protecting coastal communities during storms.
Major threats to diamondback terrapins include habitat loss, road mortality, harvesting for the pet trade, and accidental capture in crab traps. To help address population declines, the FWC Fish and Wildlife Research Institute implemented regulations that prohibit the sale of terrapins and require permits for their possession. Recreational crab traps are also required to include a bycatch reduction device that helps prevent terrapins from entering.
You can help ensure these ancient reptiles remain part of Florida's coastal marshes for generations to come by slowing down on coastal roads, leaving wild turtles in the wild, and using crab traps equipped with terrapin excluder devices.
Take some time to bask in the spirit of wild turtles this week!
Photo by Ryan Hagerty/USFWS