Dozens of baby turtles set free in Quebec river as part of zoo conservation project
PIKE RIVER, Que. — The weeks-old baby turtle wriggles its legs as it’s picked up from a blue tupperware bin and placed gently into a river south of Montreal. In a flash it’s off, swimming deftly through the murky water before disappearing from view.
The little green-brown creature twice the size of a loonie is one of about 140 endangered baby spiny softshell turtles being released into a river near Lake Champlain, near the U.S. border, as part of a zoo-led project to help save the species.
As it makes its way into the wild, the baby turtle will run a gamut of predators, from racoons to fish, birds and other turtles, which mean that only between one and five out of every hundred will live to adulthood.
But the Granby Zoo, east of Montreal, hopes that by collecting the turtle eggs and hatching them in an incubator, away from hungry predators and flooding, these little ones have a least a bit of a head start.

