Categories
Cottage Life

How more motorboat collisions are leaving turtles shell-shocked and mutilated

As a wildlife ecologist, I have been keeping tabs on the northern map turtles of Lake Opinicon since 2003. One of these turtles is CJV. She is one of more than 1,800 turtles encountered during our monitoring program.

Every spring, we catch as many turtles as we can. Each turtle is measured, examined for signs of diseases or injuries, and marked with a unique combination of small notches on the edge of its shell. This is how I recognized CJV on May 31, 2019.

CJV and I go way back, to May 19, 2005, to be exact, but we haven’t seen each other since. The passage of time has left its marks on both of us. For starters, I am noticeably greyer, balder and less fit. As for CJV, she has grown a few millimetres, but that would be nearly impossible to tell without very accurate calipers.

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But the biggest change in CJV’s appearance is her shell. After missing in action for 14 years, CJV showed up with a large but partially healed scar running from the left side of her shell to her spine. When and where she got injured is anyone’s guess, but the cause of the injury is clear. No natural predators can slice through her bony armour — but a sharp boat propeller surely can.

an overhead shot of a northern map turtle missing a fragment of its shell
CJV is a female northern map turtle from Lake Opinicon, Ont., with a large boat propeller scar.
(Grégory Bulté), Author provided

Concerning rates

Lake Opinicon is nested in the Rideau Canal World Heritage Site, and at the heart of the Frontenac Arch Biosphere Reserve. Unfortunately, these designations are doing little to prevent turtles from being chopped up.

When I first captured CJV in 2005, seven per cent of all the females we examined were scarred. When we met again in 2019, the number had climbed to 13 per cent. But mutilated turtles are not unique to Lake Opinicon.

In 2010, we reported that 13 per cent of female map turtles in the St. Lawrence Island National Park had propeller injuries. Around the same time, researchers from Laurentian University reported that more than 28 per cent of northern map turtles in the Trent Severn Waterway had been struck by a propeller.

There are eight species of freshwater turtles in Canada. All are federally listed as Species at Risk, meaning that to remain a part of our lakes, ponds and rivers, they need protection and conservation efforts.

two different photos of a turtle showing shell and face damage from a propeller
A close call: a male northern map turtle from Lake Opinicon showing a severe propeller injury to its shell and face.
(Grégory Bulté)

Betting on the long haul

It is not a coincidence that all our native turtles are in trouble — the global group of about 350 species is in a dire situation. Sixty-one percent of turtle species are extinct or threatened by extinction. This grim statistic does not have a single root cause. Like most precarious wildlife, turtles are threatened by the usual suspects of habitat loss, poaching, direct mortality from human activities and pollution.

Unfortunately, turtles have something else going against them: a 200-million-year-old gambling habit. When it comes to procreation, turtles play a numbers game: they lay as many eggs as they can over their lifespan, hoping some will eventually make it.

Turtles do not care for their eggs or young in the same way birds and mammals do, and without any care or protection, most eggs and babies are eaten by predators or otherwise die from cold, droughts, floods or other weather hazards. If a female lays enough eggs, however, some will hatch and grow into adults. Longevity is key here, and turtles evolved remarkably long life spans.

Turtles have successfully gambled their way through the last 200 million years, but the playing field has changed. Human activities are cutting the long lives of these animals too short for many females to have won their reproductive bet against time. So here we are with dwindling turtle populations in our protected areas.

We can’t say for sure if, or how much, collision with boats threatens the persistence of turtles because an important piece of information is still missing: the proportion of turtles dying from their propeller injuries. Finding dead turtles in nature is not easy because biologists have fierce competition from scavengers when it comes to finding animal carcasses.

However, what we do know raises a red flag. Many turtle populations are already experiencing an inflated amount of adult mortality. Roads alone kill countless adult turtles every year so boat mortality need not be high to precipitate the decline of some turtle populations.

A hand holding four young northern map turtles
Four three-year-old northern map turtles — the females have eight years to go before maturing.
(Grégory Bulté), Author provided

Testimonial scars

The visible scars of turtles are a testimony to the pressure recreational boating exerts on aquatic wildlife. Motorboats affect aquatic wildlife and their habitats in many ways: noise pollution, chemical pollution, wakes, erosion, collisions.

In a recent meta-analysis of 94 studies on the effects of water-based recreation on freshwater ecosystems, researchers found boats to consistently cause negative impacts on wildlife. Some of these impacts can be subtle but nonetheless important: the noise from motors alone can affect the behaviour and physiology of nesting bass. Disturbances from motorboats can also reduce the foraging time of waterfowl.

According to the National Marine Manufacturer Association Canada, the sales of outboard engines increased by 17 per cent between 2019 and 2020, and is now at a record high. With such enthusiasm for recreational powerboating, the impacts on turtles and other wildlife need to be measured. This data will dictate the need for conservation actions such as outreach programs, best practices and, if necessary, regulations such as limiting engine size, or restricting traffic.

Mutilated turtles like CJV are a reminder that lakes and rivers are living and fragile ecosystems. These ecosystems and the species they host — including turtles — provide us with countless cultural, economic, health and aesthetic services. These services are increasingly at odds with certain forms of recreational boating.

Without changes in how we perceive and use our lakes and rivers for recreation, we will find more injured turtles … until we won’t find any turtles at all.The Conversation

Grégory Bulté, Instructor, Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Carleton University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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Categories
Cottage Life

Cottage Q&A: Buying boat insurance

I need to insure my powerboat, and my current company will not insure craft over 55 hp. Are there companies that will do this?—Mark Wakefield, Apsley, Ont.

Yes. Some seasonal-home insurers offer boat policies as a separate product. And some companies are marine specialists and insure nothing but boats and PWCs. 

It’s normal for home or seasonal dwelling policies to have limitations with respect to watercraft, says Bev Mitchell, a special risks underwriter with Johnston Meier Insurance Agencies Group in Maple Ridge, B.C. Length and horsepower restrictions are very common. “It makes sense if you think about it,” says Mitchell. “You’re more likely to injure a third party if you run into them in the water with a motorized boat than if you run into them with a kayak.”   

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“A lot of companies will say, ‘No, we’re not going to touch that,’ ” says Jared Chartrand of Northstar Marine Insurance in Barrie, Ont. “They’ll say, ‘We’d be doing you a disservice.’ ” But for a company that deals in boats, it should be no problem. Fifty-five horsepower “is not a lot of horsepower,” says Chartrand. “We’ve insured boats that are 1,000 hp.” 

  Even if you have only small, motorized boats that fall under your cottage policy, it may be worth paying for a stand-alone marine policy—you’ll get more robust coverage. “The primary reason that you take out a policy to cover your cottage is to cover the building and its contents,” says Mitchell. “Not to insure your boat.”

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This article was originally published in the October 2018 issue of Cottage Life magazine.

Got a question for Cottage Q&A? Send it to answers@cottagelife.com.

Categories
Pets Files

Summer safety tips for your pet

This summer, ensure your pets are safely geared up for summer heat, traveling and outdoor activity. Whether they’re lounging around at home alone while you’re slaving away at the office – 54 percent of us leave our pets home alone while we’re at work according to a recent U.S. survey – or hitting the road, keep these tips in mind to ensure furry family members enjoy a safe and fun summer.

Keep cool and hydrated
With temperatures warming up and pets spending more time outdoors, make sure they stay hydrated with fresh water throughout the day. For longer car trips, store a travel water bowl in your vehicle.

For longer walks, tuck a collapsible fabric travel bowl in your pocket – it can easily be filled at any public fountain or restroom, or put to good use while you’re relaxing and rehydrating on the outdoor patio. Or you can rely on the kindness of strangers by asking shopkeepers for a bowl of water for Rover.

If you spend a lot of time outdoors, you may want to invest in a pair of doggie sunglasses or “doggles” as one manufacturer calls them. Whether you’re camping, traveling, or swimming, take a look at some of these summer pet essentials.

Keep Fido afloat
If you’re spending time a lot of time in or around the pool, lake or beach, dogs are like toddlers and need to be kept safe. Should a dog become exhausted or fall into the water, it’s important that the pet remains visible from the shore and boats, and a quality flotation device does the job.

Other wonderful inventions include special doggie steps that attach to the side of the pool, allowing pets to safely exit the pool. A specially-designed ramp-style boat ladder, which clamps onto the boat’s swimming ladder, allows your pet to easily climb back aboard after a cooling dip.

Buckle up on the road
When you hit the road this summer, make sure pets are properly restrained to prevent driver distraction and to keep pets, passengers and other drivers safe. According to the American Automobile Association, unrestrained pets cause more than 30,000 accidents annually.

With the average dog enjoying about five car trips per year, it’s crucial to keep pooches properly secure and comfortable. Before setting out, check out travel products like the Roadie seat belt for pets. The vet-approved adjustable device is made of the same type of webbing used in human seat belts, and easily attaches to any vehicle’s seatbelt system.

Keep pets away from the grill
With all the delicious scents in the air, make sure pets stay clear of hot grills and food. Instead, use an outdoor tie-out to ensure the dog is not sniffing around under the hot barbecue, and distract them with some of yummy treats of their own.

Load up on toys
Keep pets busy and entertained during long days and car travels by keeping plenty of toys on hand. Hint: For a relaxing trip, you may want to choose an ultrasonic squeaky toy that only your pet can hear. And don’t forget to get a few human summer toys of your own – like a state-of-the-art barbecue or a new chaise for the patio.