Community Corner

Endangered Alligator Snapping Turtle Discovered Near Tomball

53-pound turtle was discovered lodged in a pipe in an area under development

HOUSTON, TX -- Houston SPCA’s Wildlife Center of Texas received a report Tuesday from a Fairfield resident exploring a new development near Hockley when he discovered a large turtle wedged in the end of a pipe sitting in a waterway.

When the Houston SPCA rescue team arrived, they determined he was a threatened alligator snapping turtle. The pipe was dented at the opening, preventing the turtle from passing through; he struggled to keep his head up as water rushed over his body.

The Rosehill Fire Department in Tomball was called to assist and provided the necessary equipment to open the pipe.

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Although the Jaws of Life could not cut the thick conduit, the spreader widened the pipe enough to
enable Dr. Hoggard, veterinarian Houston SPCA, to free the 53-pound turtle.

The blockage caused by the pipe resulted in several more deceased alligator snapping turtles among other species that flowed out after the pipe was cleared.

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The surviving alligator snapping turtle was transported on Houston SPCA’s 24-hr injured animal rescue ambulance to the Wildlife Center of Texas where he will be medically evaluated and treated.

Houston SPCA’s Wildlife Center of Texas is currently rehabilitating one other alligator snapping turtle that was transferred to the organization through its partnership with Texas A&M University’s College of
Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences.

The 38-pound turtle was found under a car in a parking lot in Bryan-College Station.

He had an embedded fish hook and had been stabbed in the top of the head; markings indicate someone had tried to sever his head and both of his front legs.

He is currently undergoing rehabilitation at the Houston SPCA’s Wildlife Center of Texas.

Alligator snapping turtles have dinosaur-like characteristics with their spiky shells and primitive-looking faces.

They are native to Houston and are one of the few protected freshwater turtles in Texas.

The last one the wildlife center admitted in 2013 was the first one recorded in Harris County in over four decades.

The state has designated them as threatened with extinction so once the compromised alligator snapping turtles have healed, Houston SPCA’s Wildlife Center of Texas will work with Texas Parks and Wildlife to release them both in a suitable habitat.

Image: Houston SPCA Wildlife Center of Texas

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