Blanding's turtles at risk of extinction in Kanata in next few years, study finds
CBC
New research suggests an Ottawa-area freshwater turtle is under threat of extinction within the next few years due to the mass urban growth near its habitat in Kanata's South March Highlands.
A team of researchers from the University of Ottawa and Trent University tracked changes to the Blanding's turtle habitat on Terry Fox Drive over the last decade. Its latest findings reveal a 70 per cent decline in population.
"It was quite alarming because there had been a study on that same population in the early 2010s where they found that the population was relatively healthy," said Dennis Murray, one of the researchers from Trent.
The heavy development of houses and roads in that area over the last several years has changed that, and is now encroaching on the turtle's habitat, the study found.
The developer, KNL Developments Inc., had put in mitigation measures such as wildlife fencing, new wetlands and wildlife roadways to try to preserve the species, which is protected under the provincial Endangered Species Act.
As part of its development approval process, KNL hired researchers to determine if those practices were working. The study found they weren't.
"They were really unsuccessful. We found that the turtles were able to sneak under the fences, that the wetland that was created was right next to the road," Murray said.
"It's highly likely that animals are going to go to this wetland and then get smacked on the road."
The research also found fewer adult females and that no juvenile turtles were being produced. What has been left is a "bunch of old turtles."
With this rate of decline, the Blanding's turtle will likely reach its "quasi-extinction threshold" in the next few years, said Gabriel Blouin-Demers, one of the researchers from the University of Ottawa.
At this point, it's too late to reverse the damage that's been done to the turtle's population in Kanata due to the high rate of development over the past 20 years.
"Permits have been issued, developments have occurred. It's too late, basically," Blouin-Demers said.
"We're showing this and hope it will prevent other similar cases, but for the Kanata site it's more or less too late."
It's not necessarily all on the developer to do something about the situation, Blouin-Demers added.
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