Egg-Laying Day One

My 24-hour surveillance of the egg-laying process officially began today at noon. Fifteen plastic boxes sit in a row on the lab benches. Each holds a metal rack and just enough water so the surface barely touches the rack. The turtles were injected with oxytocin to be put to labor and placed on the racks.

A mother turtle takes a peak as I open the lid to take a picture.

Not half an hour had passed before the first egg was laid. After
fishing out an egg, I would wash it in distilled water to remove any mucus.
Then I would dry, weigh, and label it. Each egg is designated a letter-number
combination. The letter indicates the female turtle that laid the egg; the
number, its place in the order of her eggs. I would then bury the egg halfway
in the sand.

Each box holds eight eggs, all labeled and placed in order.

 

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *