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This guide
will help determine the severity of injury to turtles.
Please do not
attempt to patch or fix a broken turtle shell on your own.
Turtles requiring extensive repair need to be transported to an
authorized wildlife rehabilitator or veterinarian for
treatment.
Step I.
Determine if the turtle is injured:
TURTLE
NORMALS:
Head/Neck-
Should freely move around, extend and retract. May "pump" head- this
is normal. Folds in neck present.
Eyes- Should be
clear, open, reactive to stimulus. Cloudy, blue, or crusty eyes are
not normal.
Mouth/Nose-
Mouth should be shut. There should be no blood, fluid, or bubbles
coming out of either opening.
Limbs/Appendages- Should have no open, fresh wounds.
Moveable. NOTE: Previous missing legs are OK if an old injury.
Should have nothing sticking out of shell but 4 legs and a
tail.
Shell- Should be
intact, without damage or fractures. Be sure to check both top and
bottom shell. Obvious old, healed shell fractures or damage is
OK.
Activity- Turtle
should hiss, retract neck, try to get away when picked up, and may
bite. Snapping turtles may be overly aggressive and even "attack".
This is normal behavior and does not indicate a
problem.
If turtle is
injured or abnormal, skip to step 4 to determine severity of
injuries.
If turtle is
normal, proceed to step 3 for release instructions.
Step II. Determine the type of turtle:
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Land
turtles have a high-domed shell and lack webbed feet. Examples
are box turtles, wood turtles, terrapins, bog
turtles. |
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Water
turtles possess webbed feet and have a flattened shell. Pond
sliders, map turtles, river cooters, musk and mud turtles are
all aquatic (water) turtles. |
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Snapping
turtles have an enlarged head and limbs, with a very long tail
that has ridges. USE CAUTION when dealing with a snapping
turtle... they have very powerful jaws and can inflict a
serious bite. |
Step III. Releasing an uninjured turtle:
Before releasing any turtle in the wild,
attempt to confirm that the animal is a wild turtle and not a
captive pet. Pet turtles will have very shiny, colorful, and clean
shells that lack dirt, algae, and a large amount of scratches and
knicks. PET TURTLES SHOULD NEVER BE RELEASED INTO THE WILD-
transport to appropriate rehabilitator or rescue center.
Wild turtles
should be dirty, have algae and other growth on shell, will
generally be aggressive if provoked and should hiss and open mouth
(except some box turtles, which can be quite docile). They may have
a large number of old injuries, fractures, scratches, and knicks on
shell. Top of shell may be noticeably worn in older
specimens.
Release the
animal immediately when found. Do not keep the animal any longer
than is necessary to transport to a safe release location or a
wildlife rehabilitator. Do not take the animal home with you. Do not
release pets or any animal that has been in captivity.
If the turtle is
uninjured and does not appear to be a pet, RELEASE THE ANIMAL WITHIN
TWO MILES of location found. Acceptable release locations for
turtles are:
Land turtles- near a water source, in heavy
brush and undergrowth Water / Snapping turtles- release in a
large body of water. Temporary puddles and pools do not
count.
DO NOT ALLOW
CHILDREN AND BYSTANDERS TO WITNESS THE RELEASE. They may return and
attempt to catch the animal.
Step IV. INJURED TURTLES- Determine the severity of
injuries:
If a
turtle has only ONE crack in the shell, and the fracture is less
than 2" long, and it is in the center of the shell and not at the
edge, and there is no blood present, and there is no gap or
separation of shell pieces, and the pieces are not
moveable…
Apply antibiotic ointment to crack and release the
turtle per instructions on the previous page. DO NOT permanently
patch… the injury may become septic and this will trap infection
under the shell. The animal can die if this happens.
MINOR INJURIES & PROBLEMS
Transport turtle to an appropriate authorized rehabilitator for
treatment if the animal has any of the following:
Shell fractures that need more extensive care:
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Any
fracture over 2" long Crack is at edge of shell Any
shell pieces are moveable Blood or tissue is present
through crack |
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Open
fracture where you can see inside shell More than one
fracture Internal organs exposed Maggots
present |
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Other minor medical problems that need
professional care:
- Eye problems: crusty, blue, opaque, or missing eyes -
Mouth / nose problems: discharge, blood, fluid, or bubbles
present - Foot and toe infections, missing limbs if new/fresh
injury - Anything that doesn't look right and you're not sure
about
MAJOR INJURIES / LIFE-THREATENING CONDITIONS
Transport turtle to an
authorized rehabilitator, veterinarian, or shelter for euthanasia if
the animal has any of the following:
-Gurgling, bubbles,
and/or blood from mouth accompanied by a severe shell
fracture -Skull fracture or crushed head -More than 1/3 of
shell missing -Large pools of blood accompanied by
trauma -Obvious major internal injuries, entrails or organs
prolapsed outside shell
*NEVER ATTEMPT TO
SUPERGLUE OR PATCH A FRACTURED SHELL. YOU CAN TRAP INFECTION
IN THE WOUND, ULTIMATELY CAUSING DEATH. ONLY APPROPRIATELY
TRAINED INDIVIDUALS SHOULD ATTEMPT SHELL FRACTURE
REPAIRS.
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