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Red-Bellied Cooter To Headline MA Endangered Species Day

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Red-Bellied Cooter To Headline MA Endangered Species Day


WESTBOROUGH, MA — Scores of turtles will converge on Westborough on Wednesday.

Why? To celebrate the 40th year of one of the longest-running conservation efforts in the U.S. to reinvigorate the endangered red-bellied cooter species.

Starting in 1984, the state Division of Fisheries and Wildlife embarked on an effort to increase the cooter population from a low of 300. Part of that effort involved a “head start” program where schools, museums and research groups helped raise the turtles in captivity for their eventual release.

Many of those conservation partners will head to the MassWildlife headquarters in Westborough on Wednesday to deliver their red-bellied cooters. The state expects to tag the 5,000th turtle raised in the head start program. The celebration will also mark Endangered Species Day, which will officially be observed Friday.

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“Over the past forty years, MassWildlife has ‘headstarted’ over 5,000 turtles. As a result, the estimated population of northern red-bellied cooters in Massachusetts has grown from just 300 in the 1980s to over 2,000 adults today,” the agency said in a news release.

Massachusetts has the only population of red-bellied cooters in New England, with the next closest group in New Jersey. The turtles, which can live up to 50 years, and are still listed as endangered by state and federal governments.

Wednesday’s event will feature remarks by federal and state conservation officials, the Massachusetts state herpetologist Mike Jones and participants in the head start program. The event begins at 10 a.m. Wednesday at the MassWildlife headquarters, 1 Rabbit Hill Road, Westborough.



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Massachusetts

White Christmas chances rise in western Massachusetts

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White Christmas chances rise in western Massachusetts


CHICOPEE, Mass. (WWLP) – There is a chance for snow leading up to Christmas. 

In western Massachusetts, the chances for a white Christmas go up the farther north you are or the closer you are to the Berkshires. In Springfield, the chance for at least one inch of snow on Christmas Day is around 40 to 50 percent.

In Pittsfield, the chances are over 75 percent. In the extreme northwest corner of Massachusetts, near North Adams, the historical chance for a white Christmas is over 90 percent. So, it definitely helps your chances for snow if you’re in one of the higher-elevation areas.

How much snow is expected Tuesday

Light snow will begin on Tuesday around sunrise and continue on and off for much of the day until the evening.  A minor accumulation is expected in the Pioneer Valley with a few inches in the hills and Berkshires. Slick roads and sidewalks are possible, especially if not treated. High temperatures will be in the low to mid-30s.

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What’s the chance of a white Christmas in western Mass?

As of right now, the chances for a white Christmas this year are definitely higher than in the past few years, with some snow on Tuesday. Of course, the best chance for the snow to stick around until Christmas Day without melting will be back in the Berkshires. 

December 25 2025 12:00 am

Christmas Eve and Christmas Day both look dry and comfortable.

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