Vermont
From invasive weeds to floods, the wood turtle is at risk in Vermont – VTDigger
While spiny softshell turtles are threatened in Vermont and spotted turtles are endangered, wood turtles could soon be threatened in the state due to land use change. That is why the state’s Fish & Wildlife Department is watching the species closely before more serious intervention is required.
The wood turtle, a medium-sized reptile native to Vermont, is known for the striking orange coloring on its neck and the inside of its legs, creating a unique, easily recognizable pattern. This pattern has also resulted in a growing demand for wild-caught turtles on the international black market.
But that’s not the only threat to these reptiles. Invasive species, like Japanese knotweed, are a major hazard, because they overrun sand and gravel bars where wood turtles would typically lay eggs. Moreover, repeated flooding in Vermont has caused the eggs to drown, and since the species has low reproductive rates, that can severely impact local populations.
Those threats have caused the department to identify wood turtles as a species of greatest conservation need in Vermont.
On Tuesday afternoon, two wildlife technicians waded through cool, bubbling streams and traversed muddy riverbanks in central Vermont to conduct one of the final wood turtle surveys of the season.
Kiley Briggs, the director of conservation at The Orianne Society, a nonprofit organization focused on protecting and restoring habitats for rare reptiles and amphibians, and Molly Parren, a turtle technician with the Vermont Fish & Wildlife Department, stepped out of the pick-up truck to put on their boots and waders. Briggs retrieved his antenna and radio telemetry from the pick-up truck.
“With radio telemetry, (first) we attach a small transmitter onto the turtle,” Briggs said. “The transmitter sends out a radio signal, which basically beeps and then we use an antenna and a receiver to determine what direction that beep is coming from, and then we follow it until we find where the turtle is.”
Kiley Briggs and Molly Parren locate a wood turtle using radio telemetry. Photo by Klara Bauters/VTDiggerBriggs is collecting baseline data — the preliminary data that allows biologists to determine where the hotspots are for turtles and their population in those places.
Vermont’s streams provide ample habitat for wood turtles, but their ability to nest and grow the population is becoming increasingly difficult, Briggs said. As invasive Japanese knotweed spreads, female turtles are forced to travel farther in search of suitable nesting sites, further jeopardizing the species’ survival.
“We’re just getting turtles that are 40-50 years old and none that are in their 20s. That tells us: ‘Here is a problem that needs to be addressed at this site,’” Briggs said.
Due to the longevity of wood turtles — some may surpass 80 years old, as well as their low reproductive rates and slow maturation, their populations are sensitive to any threat that kills adults or removes them from the population.
“They only start laying eggs at the age of 20, which results in taking a long time to replace a population,” Briggs said.
Wood turtles spend time in water and on land but prefer to nest in river valleys — which also happen to be the best places for farms and the easiest places to build roads, Briggs said. When wood turtles spend time on land, they can be killed by tractors or run over by cars.
“Cars are a problem for all of our turtles, but for wood turtles especially, and I’ve lost turtles that were run over by farming equipment,” Briggs said. In some cases, the loss of just one or two wood turtles a year due to human causes can lead to a significant population decline or extirpation, according to The Orianne Society.
But conserving wood turtle habitat can benefit landowners. Federal programs in the U.S. Farm Bill offer financial assistance to landowners and farmers who establish riparian buffers.
After walking along a stream, Briggs, wearing polarized glasses in knee-deep water and carrying the antenna, found a turtle. It was located under the river bank, too far to grab, so he walked farther. After crossing the stream another two times, more than an hour later, Briggs found a new wood turtle in the stream that he hadn’t marked yet.
Both Parren and Briggs were excited to have found a new, seemingly young turtle and started immediately logging its data, including weight and length, in an online form on Briggs’ phone.
“With wood turtles, with males, on the bottom of the shell, is concave, that’s a male trait. As with females, the bottom of the shell is flat,” Briggs said. “For the age, we can count growth rings on their shells, kind of like counting the rings of a tree.”
The newly discovered turtle was approximately 15-years old. Wood turtles grow for the first 15-20 years of life, but they can live up to 50-70 years. As they age, their shells gradually wear down and become smoother, a trait biologists use to estimate their age. This turtle’s lighter yellow tissue in the center of his shell indicated he is still growing, according to Briggs.
“It’s rare to see a new young turtle in this location,” he said, since the site is prone to intense summer floods. “The biggest concern now is, if we have frequent summer floods, (for) many, many years, it might be too much flooding for the population to survive.”
However, at one site where a dam causes frequent summer flooding, nearly all the turtles chose to lay their eggs in upland habitat, safely away from the river, Briggs said.
“I wonder if that was them responding,” Briggs said. “The turtles know that the site floods a lot, but that’s just my interpretation of their behavior there.”
Vermont
21-year-old killed in wrong-way crash on I-89 in Vermont; other driver cited
A 21-year-old is dead after a pickup truck slammed head-on into her vehicle on Interstate 89 Wednesday evening in Bolton, Vermont, and the other driver involved has been cited.
State police say they responded around 5:22 p.m. to reports of a wrong-way driver in the area of mile marker 71. As troopers were responding, a multi-vehicle crash on the interstate was reported to dispatchers.
A preliminary investigation shows 45-year-old Timothy Wooster was driving a Toyota Tundra in the northbound lane when he crossed the median into the southbound lane, where he continued traveling the wrong way until he collided head-on with a Kia Sportage that was being driven by 21-year-old Hailey Westcot, police said.
A third vehicle, a Cascadia Freightliner, was traveling southbound when the head-on collision happened ahead, causing the vehicle to strike Westcot’s car and then rollover.
Westcot, of Northfield, Vt., was pronounced dead at the scene, police said. Wooster, of Jericho, Vt., was taken to University of Vermont Medical Center to be treated for serious but non-life-threatening injuries.
The third driver who was involved, 50-year-old Douglas Bailey, of Londonderry, New Hampshire, was evaluated on scene and did not report any injuries, police added.
Officials haven’t said what led Wooster to allegedly drive in the wrong direction on the highway. Wooster was cited on a charge of grossly negligent operation with death resulting. Further charges will be determined as the investigation continues, according to police.
Any witnesses are asked to contact Trooper Shawn Morrow at 802-878-7111. Anonymous tips can be submitted online here. The investigation remains ongoing.
It’s unclear if Wooster has obtained legal representation at this time. He’s due in Chittenden County Superior Court on Jan. 29, 2026.
Vermont
UVM men’s rugby team wins first-ever national championship – VTDigger
The University of Vermont men’s rugby team romped the University of Chicago last weekend, 71-5, to win its first-ever national championship. It’s the second time, notably, that a UVM sports team has won a national-level title in the past year.
Rugby is not a varsity sport at UVM — such as soccer or basketball — which means the school’s men’s and women’s teams play outside of the National Collegiate Athletic Association, or NCAA. The men’s team plays in National Collegiate Rugby’s Division II, which has more than 100 teams in different regional conferences across the country.
The team’s win Sunday capped an undefeated season that also saw it dispatch rivals in earlier rounds of the Division II tournament by double-digit margins.
“It really hasn’t even set in yet, still. Every time I see a picture or something, I’m like, holy — I can’t believe it,” said Jack Worobel, a senior mechanical engineering major at UVM who plays in the No. 4, or “lock,” position. “It’s awesome.”
In UVM’s rugby league, 15 players are on the field for each team at a time. Players advance the ball by running or kicking it but aren’t allowed to pass the ball forward. Points come primarily through “tries,” which are worth five points each and scored by bringing the ball into the opponent’s in-goal area and touching it to the ground.
Worobel credited UVM’s win to strong bonds that he said he and his teammates have built up over the past four years. A number of the players, including himself, have been on the team every year since they were first-year students, he said.
UVM has had a men’s rugby team since 1970, according to a school press release.
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“We all do anything for each other. Anyone would do a favor for anyone else on this team — I think that’s where the win comes (from),” Worobel said Wednesday. “It’s not from the skill or the talents. Really, it’s what’s off the field.”
The rugby team’s win comes about a year after UVM’s men’s soccer team — which competes at the highest level of collegiate athletics — won the NCAA Division I championship last December. UVM has also won six NCAA championships in skiing, with the most recent coming in 2012.
Vermont
Police investigating after ATV stolen from Vt. driveway
Police are asking for the public’s help in their ongoing investigation into a stolen all-terrain vehicle in Derby, Vermont.
State police say they were notified around 4 p.m. on Oct. 31 that a Camouflage 2008 Yamaha Rhino 700 ATV had been stolen from a driveway on Main St. The theft occurred some time between 10 p.m. on Oct. 30 and 7 a.m. on Oct. 31.
No other details were immediately available. Police did released two photos as part of the investigation.
Anyone with information about this theft is encouraged to call Vermont State Police at 802-334-8881, or leave an anonymous tip online.
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