# Influences of Temperature and Time on Habitat Use Patterns of a Semi‐Aquatic Turtle

**Authors:** Jena M. Staggs, Donald J. Brown, Madaline M. Cochrane, Andrew F. Badje, Ron A. Moen

PMC · DOI: 10.1002/ece3.72301 · Ecology and Evolution · 2025-11-09

## TL;DR

This study shows that temperature strongly influences the habitat use patterns of wood turtles, with turtles being more active on land during warmer times of the day.

## Contribution

The study demonstrates that temperature is a stronger predictor than time for wood turtle habitat use at fine temporal scales.

## Key findings

- Temperature was a stronger predictor than time for wood turtle aquatic-terrestrial habitat use.
- Terrestrial activity increased with air temperature, leading to daytime land and nighttime water activity.
- Post-nesting activity patterns differed between males and females, with females moving farther from the river.

## Abstract

Many ectothermic vertebrates have predictable seasonal activity and habitat use patterns, but variable patterns at fine temporal scales (e.g., minutes to days) that are likely influenced by thermoregulatory demands on behavior. Wood turtles (
Glyptemys insculpta
) are freshwater turtles known to use terrestrial environments during their active period. However, little research has been conducted to quantify the influence of environmental factors on diel habitat use patterns. We used fine‐resolution global positioning system (GPS) tracking and temperature data to quantify wood turtle aquatic‐terrestrial habitat‐use patterns from May through August 2015 and 2016, focusing on the influence of temporal variables and environmental temperature. We found that temporal variables and open canopy air temperature had strong explanatory power for wood turtle aquatic‐terrestrial habitat use patterns, but temperature was a stronger predictor. Terrestrial activity was positively associated with air temperature, resulting in a consistent pattern of daytime terrestrial and nighttime aquatic activity during the pre‐nesting period. Male and female activity patterns diverged during the post‐nesting activity period, with most males returning to the river at night and most females remaining terrestrial, influenced by females moving farther from the river. The results of our study provide valuable information to inform population survey design, habitat management planning, and potential responses to climate change for this unique species of conservation concern.

Reptiles rely on external heat to support metabolic processes, and this reliance could result in predictable habitat use patterns. We compared temperature and time as predictors of aquatic vs. terrestrial habitat use for wood turtles (
Glyptemys insculpta
) across hourly to seasonal time scales and found that temperature had stronger explanatory power. Our findings help explain the variability in the timing of activity observed for this species across its geographic distribution and provide useful predictions to support conservation efforts.

## Linked entities

- **Species:** Glyptemys insculpta (taxon 335392)

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Glyptemys insculpta (wood turtle, species) [taxon 335392]

## Full text

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## Figures

5 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12597130/full.md

## References

62 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12597130/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12597130