Scott Gillingwater has dedicated his life to protecting at-risk species.
For 30 years, the biologist at the Upper Thames River Conservation Authority (UTRCA) has been saving, incubating, and releasing 10,000 turtle hatchlings of seven species back into the wild.
“[Tuesday] is the grand finale of all the work we’ve done this year,” said Gillingwater, as he and his team were putting endangered turtles back into the river. “It's always exciting for myself, for the crew, to be able to kind of see this thing full circle.”
Two months ago, the ‘Turtle Team’ began collecting eggs daily from the wild and bringing them into the Southern Ontario At Risk Reptiles (SOARR) lab in London, Ont.
“Once they hatch out, they'll go into bins with water and vegetation and that just keeps them calm,” said Sean Thorpe, a three-year member of the ‘Turtle Team’.
A few feet away in the lab, Amanda Farrell began recording data from the hatchlings.
Some days they’ll be released right away back where they came from. Others may stay in the lab for a few days.

“The spiny softshell turtle is endangered, so we actually weigh and measure those ones as well,” said Farrell, a first-year wildlife assistant. “We input it into our computer, so in future years we can see the progress that we've made.”
Then it’s time for the difficult and satisfying part of letting them go.
“Every single turtle that hatches you talk to,” said Thorpe. “When you go to release them, you also talk to them because you've been with them the whole way from when they were put into the ground to when they go back out.”

After three decades, Gillingwater feels the same. He’s been locating and studying the largest known populations of threatened and endangered reptiles, including the Spiny Softshell Turtle, Blanding’s Turtle, Spotted Turtle, Queensnake, and others.
Now that the reptiles are past the most dangerous and vulnerable stage, it’s a long journey of survival.
“Now they're on their own, it may take 12 to 15 years to reach maturity,’ said Gillingwater. “We wish them luck. Maybe only one to 10 per cent will survive, but if we put enough into the environment, we will ensure that some reached maturity and can reproduce long into the future.”
