• Responding to email notices you receive.
    **************************************************
    In short, DON'T! Email notices are to ONLY alert you of a reply to your private message or your ad on this site. Replying to the email just wastes your time as it goes NOWHERE, and probably pisses off the person you thought you replied to when they think you just ignored them. So instead of complaining to me about your messages not being replied to from this site via email, please READ that email notice that plainly states what you need to do in order to reply to who you are trying to converse with.

  • IMPORTANT! PLEASE READ!! About the Google Adsense ads being displayed

    =====================
    Posted 08/15/2025
    =====================


    Yeah, I know. They are a pain in the butt. But they pay the bills to keep my server running. Just a fact of life, I am afraid.

    Want to get rid of them? Simple. Just become a Contributor level member or above and they will be gone. -> Please click HERE."

    Is that too much for me to ask of you to keep this site running? Well, sorry about that. I too wish I could get everything for free. But alas.....

    =====================
    Addendum: 01/10/2026
    =====================


    Google Adsense ad revenue for December, 2025 was just $30 over the cost of the lease for the server running this site. So, in effect, the money providing the incentive for me to continue running this site is coming SOLELY from the paid memberships and sponsorships here. Which honestly ain't much....

Shepherd students conduct research on painted turtles

bcr229

Snakes Are Cool
Staff member
Staff
Endowment
Joined
Mar 29, 2013
Messages
3,571
Reaction score
381
Points
83
Location
Inwood, WV USA
https://www.heraldmailmedia.com/news/tri_state/west_virginia/shepherd-students-conduct-research-on-painted-turtles/article_b1859582-ad15-5500-b5f6-9fc7bb9fac24.html

Shepherd students conduct research on painted turtles

Nov 5, 2018

SHEPHERDSTOWN, W.Va. — A Shepherd University professor is trying to determine what function the red, orange, and yellow colors on the painted turtle serve.

John Steffen, an assistant professor of biology at Shepherd, and two student researchers spent the summer collecting painted turtles from area ponds and bringing them to a lab at Shepherd, where they were cared for and monitored, then released back to their original homes.

Steffen, a behavioral ecologist and herpetologist, said the data collected will help determine what plants might help turtles in the wild and what nutrients should be included in foods for pet turtles.

He said painted turtles get their colors by eating a pigment in plants called a carotenoid.

“The interesting thing is, it’s actually a yellow-colored pigment that is hidden under the green of the plant,” hen said. “In their body, they start converting it to other pigments. There seems to be a physiological conversion when they eat these carotenoids, and they alter them into something different by the time they get to their skin. I am trying to understand why they do that.”

Steffen said other species, such as fish and birds, sometimes gain health benefits from converting the pigments, and he is trying to learn whether the process could improve things such as blood health and parasite resistance in turtles.

Two students — Rhett Quigley, a biology major from Martinsburg, W.Va., and Ian Whibley, a biology major from Berkeley Springs, W.Va. — worked with Steffen in the summer through the Shepherd Opportunities to Attract Research Students program.

The West Virginia Higher Education Policy Commission's Division of Science and Research awarded Shepherd a three-year, $142,000 grant in 2017 from the Research Challenge Fund that provides stipends for science and mathematics students to spend the summer helping professors doing research.

Quigley said during the summer, he and Whibley collected the turtles and helped take care of them while they were in the lab.

“We took some blood samples from them, and then measured the wavelength of their colors,” he said. “For a couple of months, we fed them food with one-half carotenoids and one-half no carotenoids, then we measured their color to see if there was any kind of a change.”

After two months, the turtles were released back to the ponds from where they came.

Quigley said they now are working on interpreting the data that they collected to determine if the colors changed based on diet.

“I thought it was really fun,” he said. “I haven’t done any in-the-field research, so it was a new experience. I plan to do more research like this later.”

Steffen is analyzing the data to determine whether the feeding experiment changed the turtles’ color. In previous research, he used all males, but decided to add females this year.

“There’s always the possibility that females don’t change color the same way that males do,” he said. “That’s the question I’m asking now, and it’s more complex and requires a deeper analysis.”
 
Back
Top