Blanding's turtle
Blanding's turtle (Emydoidea blandingii) is a medium-sized semi-aquatic freshwater turtle endemic to the Great Lakes region, upper Midwest, New England, and southern Canada.[1][2] The species is distinguished by its black carapace marked with yellow spots or streaks, a yellow-plated plastron with a hinged section for protection, and a bright yellow chin and throat that give it a perpetual "smile."[2] Adults typically reach a carapace length of 18–25 cm, with males slightly smaller than females, and exhibit negligible senescence, remaining reproductively active into advanced age.[3][4] Blanding's turtles inhabit shallow, emergent wetlands such as marshes, bogs, and slow-moving streams, while utilizing adjacent upland habitats for nesting in sandy or loamy soils and overwintering in mud below frost line.[1][5] They are omnivorous opportunists, preying on crustaceans, insects, small fish, amphibians, and carrion, supplemented by aquatic vegetation and berries.[2][6] Sexual maturity is delayed until 14–20 years, with females producing 4–21 eggs per clutch annually, but high juvenile mortality and infrequent nesting contribute to low population resilience.[7][4] The species faces severe threats from wetland drainage, habitat fragmentation by development, road mortality during seasonal migrations, and illegal pet trade collection, driving inferred global declines exceeding 50% over three generations.[8][9] These factors, compounded by the turtle's K-selected life history strategy emphasizing longevity over rapid reproduction, have led to its IUCN Red List classification as Endangered, alongside state or provincial threatened/endangered listings across much of its range.[10][11] Conservation efforts focus on habitat protection, head-starting programs, and mortality mitigation, though challenges persist from ongoing anthropogenic pressures.[12][13]Classification
Taxonomy
The Blanding's turtle (Emydoidea blandingii) belongs to the family Emydidae, a group of freshwater turtles within the order Testudines.[10][1] Its full taxonomic hierarchy is as follows:| Taxonomic Rank | Name |
|---|---|
| Kingdom | Animalia |
| Phylum | Chordata |
| Class | Reptilia |
| Order | Testudines |
| Family | Emydidae |
| Genus | Emydoidea |
| Species | blandingii |