Author

Date Approved

2026

Degree Type

Open Access Thesis

Degree Name

Master of Science (MS)

Department or School

Biology

Committee Member

Katherine Greenwald, Ph.D.

Committee Member

Jonathan Hall, Ph.D.

Committee Member

Kristin Judd, Ph.D.

Committee Member

Yu Man Lee, M.S.

Abstract

Blanding’s turtles (Emydoidea blandingii) are long-lived turtles whose populations are highly sensitive to juvenile recruitment. We used intensive nest monitoring, microclimate logging, soil measurements, and local weather data at two Southeast Michigan sites to quantify how nest placement, incubation environments, and substrate conditions influence emergence success and hatchling condition. Nesting females were morphologically similar in size and produced average clutch sizes for the species (8 ± 2 eggs). Nest sites were found on relatively open, disturbed uplands with sandier soil substrates. Emergence success was generally high (≈ 70-80%) in nests protected from predation. Sandy loam had the highest success rates whereas cobble-rich substrates were associated with markedly higher deformity rates in emerged hatchlings compared to nests without. These results highlight that, beyond predation, fine-scale nest microhabitat and substrate influence hatchling quality. Management should prioritize providing protected, low-cobble, sandy loam or loamy sand nesting habitat within 200–300 m of core aquatic areas.

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