[NatureNS] downtown Dartmouth's Red-eared Slider captured...

From: "Dusan Soudek" <soudekd@ns.sympatico.ca>
To: <naturens@chebucto.ns.ca>
References: <20110922063147.0BVG0.584486.root@tormtz02>
Date: Thu, 22 Sep 2011 08:16:31 -0300
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Hello Gayle,
   Kent at MicMac Mall? That's an excellent option. Will drop by there today 
at lunchtime and make an inquiry. Thanks for the tip!
Dusan

----- Original Message ----- 
From: <duartess@ns.sympatico.ca>
To: <naturens@chebucto.ns.ca>
Cc: "Dusan Soudek" <soudekd@ns.sympatico.ca>
Sent: Thursday, September 22, 2011 7:31 AM
Subject: Re: [NatureNS] downtown Dartmouth's Red-eared Slider captured...


> Maybe Kents at MicMac Mall might want it. In their Garden Center they have 
> an artificial pond with 3 (I believe) Red-eared Sliders residing in it. As 
> for DNR, I recall an incident not long ago where a family had their Slider 
> that had been their pet for years, confiscated by DNR. They were going to 
> destroy it and the family, I believe, had to take the whole situation to 
> court & it was only then that DNR released it to the Wildlife park.
>
> Gayle MacLean
> Dartmouth
>
>
> ---- Dusan Soudek <soudekd@ns.sympatico.ca> wrote:
>>    This afternoon, on the way from work, I finally succeeded in capturing 
>> the "Sawmill River" Red-eared Slider, a.k.a. Red-eared Turtle, native to 
>> the Southern U.S.A. Apparently it had been released by someone with a 
>> connection to the nearby Marine House, the regional headquarters of DFO.
>>    I reported my sightings of the exotic turtle here in August. DNR and 
>> John Gilhen of the Nova Scotia Museum of Nature were concerned, as this 
>> species has the potential to establish itself in the wild in Southern 
>> Canada, as may have already happened near Hamilton, Ontario. It tends to 
>> outcompete the native Eastern Painted Turtle. Local DNR staff were 
>> planning to capture it.
>>    In August I could locate the reptile only during sunny afternoons, 
>> when it sunned itself on a slanted slab of concrete near the downstream 
>> end of the long culvert that drains "Sawmill River" from Sullivans Pond 
>> to Dartmouth Cove. But I haven't seen it for weeks, and assumed that it 
>> either moved away or that DNR succeeded in capturing it.
>>    This afternoon it was sunny, the tide was out, and there was minimal 
>> flow in the downtown stream, with excellent visibility in the pool below 
>> the culvert's end. The turtle was sunning itself again, but this time at 
>> a slightly different location. I failed to catch the turtle while it was 
>> still out of water, but had no problem picking it up from the mud at the 
>> bottom of the knee-deep pool in the stream.
>>    Right now the turtle is in a plastic tub at my house. It looks 
>> healthy, as it is quite active. I have no interest in keeping it, but am 
>> willing to give it to anyone willing and able to look after it. Otherwise 
>> I will contact DNR to have it picked up. In which case the Red-eared 
>> Turtle will likely end up in the Shubenacadie Wildlife Park.
>>    Dusan Soudek 

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