College Students' Turtle Project Takes Dark Twist

webglider

Dagobah Resident
These stories make me feel so sad and ashamed of being a human being. :( I like the college student though and his idea to create turtle underpasses so turtles could cross the road safely. :halo: His concern reminds me that there are caring people in the world, and that some people can be conditioned through education and the media to be empathetic.

quote from http://www.newsforage.com/2012/12/college-students-turtle-project-takes.html

Clemson University student Nathan Weaver set out to determine how to help turtles cross the road. He ended up getting a glimpse into the dark souls of some humans.


Weaver put a realistic rubber turtle in the middle of a lane on a busy road near campus. Then he got out of the way and watched over the next hour as seven drivers swerved and deliberately ran over the animal. Several more apparently tried to hit it but missed.

"I've heard of people and from friends who knew people that ran over turtles. But to see it out here like this was a bit shocking," said Weaver, a 22-year-old senior in Clemson's School of Agricultural, Forest and Environmental Sciences.

To seasoned researchers, the practice wasn't surprising.

The number of box turtles is in slow decline, and one big reason is that many wind up as roadkill while crossing the asphalt, a slow-and-steady trip that can take several minutes.


Sometimes humans feel a need to prove they are the dominant species on this planet by taking a two-ton metal vehicle and squishing a defenseless creature under the tires, said Hal Herzog, a Western Carolina University psychology professor.


"They aren't thinking, really. It is not something people think about. It just seems fun at the time," Herzog said. "It is the dark side of human nature."

Herzog asked a class of about 110 students getting ready to take a final whether they had intentionally run over a turtle, or been in a car with someone who did. Thirty-four students raised their hands, about two-thirds of them male, said Herzog, author of a book about humans' relationships with animals, called "Some We Love, Some We Hate, Some We Eat."

Weaver, who became interested in animals and conservation through the Boy Scouts and TV's "Crocodile Hunter" Steve Irwin, wants to figure out the best way to get turtles safely across the road and keep the population from dwindling further.

Among the possible solutions: turtle underpasses or an education campaign aimed at teenagers on why drivers shouldn't mow turtles down.

The first time Weaver went out to collect data on turtles, he chose a spot down the road from a big apartment complex that caters to students. He counted 267 vehicles that passed by, seven of them intentionally hitting his rubber reptile.

He went back out about a week later, choosing a road in a more residential area. He followed the same procedure, putting the fake turtle in the middle of the lane, facing the far side of the road, as if it was early in its journey across. The second of the 50 cars to pass by that day swerved over the center line, its right tires pulverizing the plastic shell.

"Wow! That didn't take long," Weaver said.

Other cars during the hour missed the turtle. But right after his observation period was up, before Weaver could retrieve the model, another car moved to the right to hit the animal as he stood less than 20 feet away.

"One hit in 50 cars is pretty significant when you consider it might take a turtle 10 minutes to cross the road," Weaver said.

Running over turtles even has a place in Southern lore.

In South Carolina author Pat Conroy's semi-autobiographical novel "The Great Santini," a fighter-pilot father squishes turtles during a late-night drive when he thinks his wife and kids are asleep. His wife confronts him, saying: "It takes a mighty brave man to run over turtles."

The father denies it at first, then claims he hits them because they are a road hazard. "It's my only sport when I'm traveling," he says. "My only hobby."

That hobby has been costly to turtles.

It takes a turtle seven or eight years to become mature enough to reproduce, and in that time, it might make several trips across the road to get from one pond to another, looking for food or a place to lay eggs. A female turtle that lives 50 years might lay over 100 eggs, but just two or three are likely to survive to reproduce, said Weaver's professor, Rob Baldwin.


Snakes also get run over deliberately. Baldwin wishes that weren't the case, but he understands, considering the widespread fear and loathing of snakes. But why anyone would want to run over turtles is a mystery to the professor.

"They seem so helpless and cute," he said. "I want to stop and help them. My kids want to stop and help them. My wife will stop and help turtles no matter how much traffic there is on the road. I can't understand the idea why you would swerve to hit something so helpless as a turtle."
 
I have seen this sort of thing happened in my state and came to similar conclusions. I've spend a lot of time on the road over the years (up to 5 hours a day, averagely) and saw that there were so many people would deliberately run over any animals on the road. Some times ago, I saw a big turtle on the shoulder with its back badly damaged (I think it was dead) with the tire skid marks around it. A co-worker once told me that he saw a car full of college students intentionally ran over a baby deer on the road and drove away with a loud cheer.

One time, some years ago, when I was driving on a small back-road, I noticed a small rabbit hopping across the road and I pulled over to go and pick it up to get it out of harm's way, but there was a car coming in from another direction. The rabbit kept hopping away from me as I was trying to get it. The driver almost hit the rabbit, but it stopped because of I (a human) was in the way. The driver yelled at me to get out of the way, and I was telling her that there's a rabbit on the road, and then she yelled, "Who care?!" She then drove past me, but thankfully the rabbit got away. Then, I was to blame for getting in her way.

I always get angry and ashamed whenever people would intentionally kill animals on the road, just for the fun of it. But, I'm glad that Weaver was able to do this experiment and shared his observations to the world.
 
This was something I noticed as well, that some people actually purposefully hit a critter crossing the road. Then on the other hand, myself and I have seen others do the same, have pulled over on the side of the road and moved a turtle to safety. Once tried to pick up a dog that had been hit by a car in front of me, but the dog ran off.
 
How could anyone do such a thing and drive off with a clear conscience, let alone cheer? Are they that ponerized??

I myself have witnessed people just 'having some fun' killing animals and it always baffled me.

I remember when I was about 8, I was 'playing' with my hamster on the couch, letting it roam free, putting on a show for him with my action figures, then letting her smell the figures, etc and occasionally throwing her up in the air (just like parents do with their babies in movies, I think that's where I got that from). It was also after lunch, I was probably high on sugar and it just kept escalating to the point where it became a pathological game for me. I was throwing that little helpless animal to the couch from a distance...like playing ball. And it didn't take long before 'I missed'. She hit the floor and the horror of it all hit me. Of course, at first I was just concerned that my stupidity might have hurt the little being and that my mother will find out. I picked her up and put her back in her terrarium. She was barely moving and then she started bleeding from her mouth. I knew then that she was gonna die and I tried to talk to her, saying that I'm sorry and that it'll be ok...I started crying and kind of praying for a quick death so she wouldn't suffer too long. Well, it didn't take long. I felt horrible, like I killed a part of myself.

In subsequent years, whenever I saw an animal on the street, mostly pigeons in trouble, not being able to fly, I either picked them up with a plastic bag wrapped around their bottom and put them on the grass somewhere or near a park or inside a park and once I even carried one home to try to help it, feed it and once it's strong enough, let it go again. Not sure to what degree these instances were just out of guilt or how much was actually because of what I learned from that one time when I was 8. But it's the first thing to this day that pops into my mind whenever someone asks 'What the worst thing you've ever done?'

Just wanted to share in an effort to shed some light on the dark. Sorry I went off topic.

Back to the original topic, it'd be great if we could have more natural overpasses like the one in the picture posted below all over the world.
Source: _http://annazoe.tumblr.com/post/27985704455/how-cool-is-this-a-green-overpass-for-animals-to
 

Attachments

  • greenoverpass.jpg
    greenoverpass.jpg
    50.4 KB · Views: 3

Trending content

Back
Top Bottom