Natures Landlord
NATURE'S LANDLORD
Gopher tortoise Gopherus Polyphemus
Adult
Identification
length 8-15 inches (20-38cm)
weight: up to 30lbs (14 kg) average 8-10lbs (4-5kg)
color: adults are grayish-brown, and juveniles are a yellowish-brown
Legs and feet: front legs and feet are flat and shovel-like which helps them dig their burrows, back legs, and feet are elephantine.
No webbing is present between toes.
Habitat
Three key requirements
1. Dry upland habitat with sandy, well-drained soils for ideal burrowing and nesting.
2. Open the tree canopy so that plenty of sunlight reaches the ground.
3. Low-growing food plants for their herbaceous (plant-only) diet including gopher apple and purple love grass.
Reproduction
Mating Season: April through July
Females reach between 10 and 20 years old.
Females lay a clutch of 4-7 ping-pong ball-sized eggs which are buried in the ground.
Gestation:80-100 days
Sex is determined by the temperature of the soil. Eggs. F 85 (30C) develops into females, and <F 85 develops into males.
Hatchlings are 1-2 inches (3-5cm) and grow 3/4 inches a year.
Keystone Species
Gopher tortoise burrow provides a home and refuge to over 350 vertebrate and invertebrate species.
Many share the burrow with the tortoise or use abandoned burrows.
Burrow
Used to regulate body temperature and as shelter from predators and wildfires.
Up to 50ft (15 m) long and 15ft (5 m) deep, depending on the water table. The width is about the length of the tortoise.
The Aron (or Mound) in front of the burrow is often used as the nesting site.
Multiple burrows may be used by individual tortoises.
Burrows provide shelter from the heat, cold, fire, and a safe place to raise young.
Why did the gopher tortoise cross the road?
To get to the other side! probable to graze
What can you do to help?
Watch the road for crossing tortoises
do not take or move them
Plant native plants in their habitat.
If you find them near water, leave them on land.
Cool facts
They live for more than 89 years.
They right themselves if flipped over.
They socialize in groups called pods.
They eat bones from dead animals, presumably to get calcium
they dig up to 9ft a day in sandy soils
They have a good sense of smell.
Conservation & Status
Gopher tortoises are a protected species
Their populations are declining due to habitat loss and fragmentation, disease, vehicle strikes, and predation by invasive species.
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