I have at least three box turtles resident on my property: an adult male, 
an adult female, and a three-inch juvenile which might be from last year.  I 
tend to find them separately every few months, especially during spring rains, 
although I happened to see all three this past weekend.

    My property has a fair amount of thickets, shrubs, native plantings and 
tree cover, but it's something of an island within a matrix of lawn-obsessed 
suburbia.  The adult male and female both have old damage on their shells, 
which I assume is from past lawnmowers, and several of my neighbors have riding 
mowers, large dogs and/or a mania for broad open spaces of grass and little 
else.

    And very sadly, earlier today I discovered that the female box turtle 
recently laid at least a dozen eggs, which were dug up last night by expert 
paws and licked clean.  The culprit was probably a grey fox, although raccoons, 
opossums, domestic cats and stray dogs also circulate through the neighborhood.

    So my question is for anyone who works with box turtles or backyard 
conservation: is there a way to ensure that the existing turtles don't fall 
victim to a    lawnmower, or a neighbor's dog, or some other predator?  There's 
enough appropriate habitat to keep them nearby, but I worry that sooner or 
later a box turtle will wander in the wrong direction, and I'd like to prevent 
that if possible.

                                                                                
                                         - J. A.

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