I saw an interesting post on Facebook about Box turtles in brumation in winter. I like these guys, don't you?
Photo via Facebook
During brumation, my metabolism slows to a crawl, letting my body match winter temperatures and conserve energy when food disappears. This is an evolved survival strategy, not sleep. Move me and you erase a lifetime of navigation. Leave me, and spring will do the rest.
Quote from Facebook post
Box turtle brumation is a natural winter cool-down where they burrow into soil or leaf litter, slowing their metabolism. This helps them to survive cold and scarce food by living off stored fat. This allows for minimal movement but requiring deep insulation to prevent freezing. It's a vital survival instinct, not a deep sleep. If you see a turtle in the wild in brumation, leave it alone.
Now let's end with some sky photos from January in weird weather here at the condo complex this past week.
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Beautiful skies! Much of this information about box turtles applies to the desert tortoise as well.
ReplyDeleteGood to know - I just like them a lot
Delete...Carol, few of us have been spared the cold this year. Be warm and well.
ReplyDeleteWishing you the same Tom
ReplyDelete