New study sheds light on the brain evolution of turtles
A new study led by the University of Birmingham shows that the brain of turtles has evolved slowly, but constantly over the last 210 million years, eventually reaching a variety in form and complexity, which rivals that of other animal groups.
The study also discovered that the first turtles with a fully formed shell were very likely to be living on land and not in water or in an environment where they burrowed underground.
Turtle News From Around the World
Conservation
Australia: king tide hits Mon Repos, turtles safe
India: olive ridley sea turtle (Lepidochelys olivacea) nesting season begins
USA: new study allows for better gopher tortoise (Gopherus polyphemus) management (PHOTOS)
Crime & Punishment
Riviera Beach men sentenced for stealing nearly 500 turtle eggs
Ecology
USA: Georgia’s Blackbeard Island splits in two, more islands expected to follow
Australia: flatback sea turtle (Natator depressus) hatchling season begins on Mackay beaches
Education
USA: learn more about cold stunning in sea turtles
Health & Medical
USA: Turtle Hospital in FL using new treatment for fibropapilloma in sea turtles (VIDEO)
Miscellany
USA: lost sulcata (Centrochelys sulcata) found and returned to family
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Photo from Stephan Lautenschlager, University of Birmingham.