Dig Deeper
Click the images below to learn more about TIMSC and conservation work along the coast
Spot it: Medium-sized turtle, often with black and white spotted patterns on head and face. Their shell and skin patterns are used to distinguish between individual turtles.
Fun Fact: Diamondback terrapins have special glands that help remove excess salt from their bodies. Their tears are quite salty!
Species Spotlight: Diamondback Terrapin
Malaclemys terrapin
Diamondback terrapins are the only turtles living in our brackish salt marshes. Their feet have webbing that allow them to swim, while also being able to pull themselves onto marsh and creek banks to bask in the sun. Unlike sea turtles, they can retract their legs and head into their shells for protection. Like sea turtles, diamondback terrapins lay their eggs above the high tide line in the early summer, with hatchlings emerging in late summer (right now!).
These turtles love to hunt and eat fiddler crabs, periwinkle snails, and small shellfish. On Georgia’s coast, you’ll find crab traps equipped with TEDs (Turtle Excluder Devices) to allow trapped terrapins to escape (very similar to TEDs on shrimp boats for sea turtles).
If you swing by TIMSC, it’s likely you’ll see a terrapin or two roaming the tanks in the center. Ask the staff any questions you have—and as you leave the center, don’t forget to drive slowly (especially along marshy areas) and watch for terrapins crossing the road!
How to visit & recreate responsibly
The Tybee Island Marine Science Center is located at 37 Meddin Dr. on Tybee Island (at the end of the North Beach Parking lot on the beachside of Fort Screven). You must pay for parking on site. During the summer, the center is open Wednesday to Monday (closed Tuesdays) from 9:30 AM to 5 PM. Admission is $12-15 depending on age, with kids ages 4 and under visiting the center for free.
TIMSC has a robust program schedule that fills up very quickly! Check out their available upcoming programming on their website and sign up before you visit to be sure you can get a spot.
As with any public center or museum space, respect the directions of the staff, especially when it comes to the safety of both visitors and the different animals they have in the tanks for you to see. If you sign up for programs, read the descriptions carefully so you wear the right footwear, hats, etc. And don’t forget to bring your reusable water bottles so you can stay hydrated during your visit!
Right in our backyard
The Tybee Island Marine Science Center reminds us that science, nature, and wonder are inherent to Georgia’s 100-mile coast—if we just have our eyes open! As summer wraps up, we hope you take some time to step outside. Need some direction? Check out our “Nature in Your Backyard” series on YouTube!
Share with a Friend!
Top off your summer with friends and family by sending them one of our unique e-cards. Email Katie for the image—and then share via text or email as you please!
Beach Reads Booklist
Nonfiction
“Of Time and Turtles: Mending the World, Shell by Shattered Shell,“ by Sy Montgomery
“Spying on Whales,” by Nick Pyenson
Fiction
“Remarkably Bright Creatures,” by Shelby van Pelt



















Here you see

