09/12/2017
We'd like your help saving frogs and turtles.
Landscape ponds have increased in popularity and many frogs and turtles naturally take advantage of these beautiful waterscapes. We are not talking about creatures introduced by you to the pond, only those who have found your beautiful new space and have taken up residence. (if you introduced something to your pond, skip to the bottom section)
If you do not heat your landscape pond over the winter and it does not have a natural mud bottom, please drain it this week to give the turtles and frogs time to move on to a new winter location before it gets cold.
We know it seems early, but this week's daytime temps are forecast to be warm enough that these critters can move on to a new location. Once day time temps start dropping, they won't move and you'll end up with displaced herptiles.
We cannot overwinter frogs and turtles that have been removed from landscape ponds.
We'll list specifics below for those who do have ponds and want to read more, but we'll ask now that you share this post with your friends and family in the hopes that word will spread and frogs/turtles will have time to find a safe winter habitat. Thank you for helping these animals!
Here are specifics:
1) We want to stress this only applies to naturally occurring frogs/turtles, etc. If you populated your pond with store-bought turtles/frogs, you'll need to overwinter them yourself or contact the Minnesota H**petological Society to see about placement. They cannot be released into the wild.
2) There are many diseases posing a significant threat to our reptiles and amphibians. Please do not manually relocate any of these animals. By draining the pool now, you'll give the frogs and turtles time to move back to their natural habitat - wherever they were prior to discovering your beautiful pond. They may even return next spring when you re-activate your pond.
3) If you found a turtle somewhere and brought it home to your pond, we'll have to hope that it'll find its way back to where you found it. If it doesn’t, and you relocated it, please call the Minnesota H**p Society for help finding placement. Again, we're very concerned about disease spreading so if you did bring someone home with you, please avoid doing that next spring.
Local frogs/turtles will find their way to your pond if it provides a good environment. Just give them time: Time to find it and of equal importance, time to move on to a healthy, natural winter environment.