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Gopher tortoises • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o5FwvUD2e94 • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GQSZjgl6Iss • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BF8UAEVWgwk Tortoise facts • Gopherus polyphemus • 1 of 4 tortoise species in North America Family Testudinidae • Desert tortoise Gopherus agassizii • Texas tortoise Gopherus berlandieri • Sonoran Desert tortoise Gopherus morafkai Gopher tortoise • Range: Gopher tortoise ecology • Like other NA tortoises, inhabits relatively arid environments in its range (sandhill, scrub, coastal scrub primarily here in FL) • Often found in disturbed sites (retention ponds, roadsides) • Not often found in association with sites with standing water/high water tables, although they can swim. • Limiting factors (other than standing water) include difficult soils (compacted, clays), unbroken canopy, dense ground-level shrubby vegetation Gopher tortoise ecology • Primary remaining native grazer in FL grasslands • Higher densities often associated with higher density (ground cover) of herbaceous vegetation • Food items include broadleaf grasses, legumes, cacti (Opuntia), wiregrass (early spring), and opportunistic foraging (seeds, fruits, flowers) • Potentially an important disperser for native grasses and other plants Gopher tortoise biology • Long-lived species (?) • Females reach sexual maturity after 12-15 years • Low fecundity (clutch size is ~ 5-6 eggs, single clutch per year) • Mating and nesting occurs in the spring • Eggs incubate over 100 days in the burrows • Vast majority of eggs and young are killed (some reports estimate populations may only produce young that survive beyond the first year every 7 years or so. • Racoons are primary nest predators, but lots of others Gopher tortoise burrows • Burrow depth limited by the water table • Affect soil chemistry • Serve as sites for plant recruitment • Serve as key soil disturbance necessary for soil swimming vertebrates (e.g. sand skinks) • Serve as refuge for numerous species (indigo snakes, Florida mouse) • Hundreds of commensal species (flies, beetles, etc.) Reasons for decline/threats • Primary factors: habitat loss, habitat degradation (fire suppression), human predation • Habitat loss: urban development is generally incompatible with tortoise ecology • Habitat degradation: roads (roadkill), dense vegetation (due to lack of burning), loss of food plants (due to lack of burning) makes habitat unsuitable causing abandonment and/or death • Gopher tortoise has been a food item for over 4000 years for humans. • Until recently, regularly taken as food. Now illegal. • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eNknz8hYTRs • Discuss issues of tortoise relocation (unexpected threats, problems)