Hatchling male collared lizard with conspicuous orange bars
Hatchling male collared lizard with conspicuous orange bars
Female (no orange) and male (orange)  hatchlings
Female (no orange) and male (orange) hatchlings
Adult male
Adult male
Stanley at Sooner Lake dam
Stanley at Sooner Lake dam
Stanley with coachwhip
Stanley with coachwhip
Lauren at Sooner Lake dam
Lauren at Sooner Lake dam
Lauren at Sooner Lake dam
Lauren at Sooner Lake dam
Lauren painting an adult
Lauren painting an adult
How much does it weigh?
How much does it weigh?
How long is it (SVL)?
How long is it (SVL)?
Lauren painting an adult
Lauren painting an adult
Female hatchling
Female hatchling
Jerry and Matt with M. flagellum
Jerry and Matt with M. flagellum
Andrea with coachwhip
Andrea with coachwhip
Andrea with the nooses we use
Andrea with the nooses we use
Andrea stalking a lizard
Andrea stalking a lizard
Andrea with a capture
Andrea with a capture
Measuring mass
Measuring mass
Taking a blood sample without injuring the subject
Taking a blood sample without injuring the subject
Measuring color aspects of the hatchling orange bars
Measuring color aspects of the hatchling orange bars
Andrew with a hatchling
Andrew with a hatchling
Staged intrusion of orange-painted hatchling male
Staged intrusion of orange-painted hatchling male
Staged intrusion of neutral-painted hatchling male
Staged intrusion of neutral-painted hatchling male
Staged intrusion with approaching resident
Staged intrusion with approaching resident
"Fishing" for lizards at Sooner Lake dam
Itty-Bitty
Itty-Bitty
Two lizards on a date
Two lizards on a date
Stanley with Lauren, Andrea, Matt, and Gil
Stanley with Lauren, Andrea, Matt, and Gil

El Colorado site at 2900 m in the Andes
El Colorado site at 2900 m in the Andes
Fox searching for lizards
Fox searching for lizards
Enrique noosing
Enrique noosing
Enrique catches a lizard
Enrique catches a lizard
Stanley noosing
Stanley noosing
Susana noosing
Susana noosing
Stanley at El Colorado
Stanley at El Colorado
Our Mazda pickup in Chile
Our Mazda pickup in Chile
La Parva from our field site
La Parva from our field site
Road to field site
Road to field site
Nearby mountain peak
Nearby mountain peak
Mountain peak viewed from our site
Mountain peak viewed from our site
Flores
Flores
BWWW in field
BWWW in field
WRWR in field
WRWR in field
Yearling on 11-12-13
Yearling on 11-12-13
Yearling on 11-12-13
Yearling on 11-12-13
Yearling with radio on 11-14-13
Yearling with radio on 11-14-13
Susana tracking radio-tagged lizards
Susana tracking radio-tagged lizards
Yearling in field
Yearling in field
Enrique with borescope
Enrique with borescope
Borescope insertion
Borescope insertion
1-day old neonate in natal crevice
1-day old neonate in natal crevice
Lizard face via borescope
Lizard face via borescope
Newborns in lab 3-7-13
Newborns in lab 3-7-13
L leopardinus 1-day old lab-born 3-18-13d
L leopardinus 1-day old lab-born 3-18-13d
Neonate in field
Neonate in field
Lizard pod
Lizard pod
Lizard pod expanded
Lizard pod expanded
Stanley tracking radio-tagged lizards
Stanley tracking radio-tagged lizards
Mero gaucho
Mero gaucho
Mero gaucho
Mero gaucho
Tachimenis chiliensis
Tachimenis chiliensis
Our daily mountain road
Our daily mountain road
Susana with colonoscope
Susana with colonoscope
Stanley setting GPS waypoint
Stanley setting GPS waypoint
Stanley with colonoscope
Stanley with colonoscope
View from mountain road
View from mountain road
Dedal de Oro
Dedal de Oro
Fall
Fall
Fall
Fall
Fall
Fall
Pan tostado
Pan tostado
Advanced notice?!
Advanced notice?!
Field apartment (wow!)
Field apartment (wow!)
Snow on our Jacuzzi, oh no!
Snow on our Jacuzzi, oh no!
Casa de piedra
Casa de piedra
Enrique in Valparaiso
Enrique in Valparaiso
Enrique and Chilean collaborator  Herman Núñez
Enrique and Chilean collaborator Herman Núñez
Stanley with cafe helado!
Stanley with cafe helado!

under construction

 

M temminckiiCommercial harvest of most species of freshwater turtles had been allowed in Oklahoma before a temporary moratorium was put into effect in 2008, but the impacts of harvest and general status of freshwater turtles in Oklahoma are poorly understood. We conducted an intensive 2-year survey of the freshwater turtle species of eastern Oklahoma in 2009-2010, resampling 35 sites that were previously surveyed by D. Riedle in 1997-1999 (Riedle et al. 2005), and compared results between these two surveys. We compared catch per unit effort (CPUE), species richness, and species diversity separately for northeastern and southeastern Oklahoma. We found a significant decrease in CPUE compared to 1997-1999 across both the northeastern and the southeastern sites. We also saw significant declines in species richness and species diversity, but only for northeastern sites. The three most commercially harvested taxa (Trachemys scripta, Apalone spp., and Chelydra serpentina) showed significantly decreased CPUE compared to 1997-1999 at paired sites in the northeast, whereas only T. scripta showed significantly lower CPUE at paired sites in the southeast. Prevalence (number of sites occupied) of C. serpentina in the northeast declined, whereas prevalence of Apalone spp. in the southeast increased. We also compared carapace lengths in 2009-2010 between northeastern and southeastern sites for the three most harvested taxa. Individuals of two of the three species were significantly smaller in the northeast. Commercial turtle harvest in Oklahoma has been heavy. Records of the OklahomMap turtlea Department of Wildlife Conservation report that over 800,000 Oklahoma turtles were purchased from commercial collectors in 1994-2010. Overall, it appears that harvest played a role in the decline of aquatic turtle species across eastern Oklahoma since Riedle's surveys in 1997-1999. These declines have been more severe in northeastern than southeastern Oklahoma.