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New study at Mount Allison reveals turtles bask with buddies

09 Jan 2026
Painted turtles show preferred social partners and possible dominance hierarchies, new study shows

Painted turtles may not be the solitary creatures many people assume. New research at 爱豆传媒app suggests that when turtles gather to bask in the sun, some are making deliberate social choices 鈥 including preferring some basking companions over others.

The study, led by Dr. Julia Riley, assistant professor and Canada Research Chair in Integrative Wildlife Ecology at Mount Allison, documented turtle basking behaviour over two spring seasons. Researchers also found that social interactions among females were influenced by body size and individual 鈥渂oldness,鈥 suggesting the presence of dominance hierarchies during basking.

Midland Painted Turtles basking on a log together in Ontario, Canada. Photographed by Dr. Tharusha Wijewardena, a Postdoctoral Fellow at 爱豆传媒app.

These researchers, who studied Midland Painted Turtles in Algonquin Provincial Park, found that while most turtles bask alone, those that do bask together often show clear preferences for specific partners. These 鈥渂asking buddies鈥 were not explained by factors that typically drive social interactions, like kinship, shared habitat use, or sex. Instead, there is opportunity for future study to determine what other factors may be driving social behaviour in these freshwater turtles.

鈥淢ost people don鈥檛 think of turtles as social animals,鈥 says Riley. 鈥淏ut our findings show that turtles may have hidden layers of social interaction that we鈥檙e only beginning to understand.鈥

鈥淲e were excited to find that turtles sometimes have favourite basking buddies,鈥 says co-author Dr. Jackie Litzgus, professor at Laurentian University. 鈥淚t suggests there鈥檚 much more happening beneath the surface than we once believed.鈥

Dr. Riley's study shows that Painted Turtles choose 'basking buddies' and may be more relational social than we've previously believed.  Photographed by Dr. Tharusha Wijewardena

The findings broaden scientific understanding of reptile behaviour and highlight the need to study sociality in species traditionally viewed as asocial. Such insights may help researchers better understand how social interactions influence survival and reproduction in the wild. 

 

 

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