Muskoka Wildlife Centre





  
American Toad
Viber
Badger
Dozer
Sandy
Bald Eagle
Thorondor
Hal
Izumi
Barn Owl
Barney (a.k.a. Moonface)
Silo
Beaver
Woodrow
Millie
Black Bear
Kootenay
Black Rat Snake
Kingston
Licorice
Blanding's Turtle
Oliver
Emy (not on display)
Bobcat
Rufus
Box Turtle
Murtle
Broad-winged Hawk
Hawksley
Bull Frog
Fergus
Pavarotti
Cottontail Rabbit
Peter
Cougar
Kokanee
Eastern Fox Snake
Copper
Fisher
Mike
Five-Lined Skink
Liz
Flying Squirrel
Pixie
Great Horned Owl
Dr. Hoo (not on display)
Grey Tree Frog
Leaf
Twiggy
Groundhog/Woodchuck
Clover
Kestrel
Punk
Lynx
Yeti
Marten
Conifer
Milk Snake
Skim
Moose
Chocolate
Lucky
Opossum
Indiana
Painted Turtle
Raphael
Willamina
Porcupine
Quillber
Thistle
Raccoon
Zorro
Dawn
Raven
Edgar
Nevermore
Red Fox
Renard
Red-tailed Hawk
Will Scarlet (not on display)
Saw-whet Owl
Luna
Snapping Turtle
Sam
Junior (not on display)
Stinkpot Turtle
Lily (not on display)
Striped Skunk
Flower
Aroma
Turkey Vulture
Barfalomew (not on display)
Wolf
Montana
Nikita
Akayla
Wolverine
Hyde
Gulo
Wood Turtle
Oakley


Emy (not on display) the Blanding's Turtle

I'm sponsored! Special thanks to Smith Family
Born: unknown
Sex: Female
 

Emy was a resident of a turtle trauma centre in Peterborough after she was hit by a car.  She required surgery to literally glue her shell back together. Unfortunately, her injuries also included damage to her eyes, resulting in blindness.  Emy now travels across the province with our Speaking of Wildlife presentation, teaching thousands of people each year how to protect turtles from people.

Blanding's Turtle (Emydoidea blandingii)

Average Size: Average Weight:
Body Length: 12-27 cm (5-10 in)
Average Lifespan: Range:
Up to 80 years Found in central to southern Ontario, to as far as the Lake Nipissing region.

Dining and Dwelling

Life and Death

The Blanding's turtle is an omnivore feeding on fish, minnows, tadpoles, small aquatic invertebrates, crustaceans, insects and other aquatic life. While on land they will also feed on vegetation.

They spend most of their time in the water of lakes and ponds. They may wander for some distance on land but they do their sunbathing near water. When frightened on land, a Blanding's turtle may hiss, quickly draw itself into it's shell, and can stay there for hours at a time.

This turtle lays six to eleven eggs in a hole about seven inches deep. They are laid in June or early July and usually hatch in September.

The numbers of this species have depleted to such an extent, in some areas, that federal authorities have placed it on a list of endangered Canadian reptiles.

That's Amazing

  • Unlike most aquatic turtles, it can swallow it's food without submerging its head underneath the water.