Cuora
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Cuora | ||||||||||||||||||
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Around 10-11, see article. |
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Cistoclemmys Pyxiclemmys |
Cuora, the Asian box turtle is a genus of the family Geoemydidae comprising some 10-11 species with about the same number of subspecies. The Keeled Box Turtle/Pyxidea mouhotii is now often included in this genus but half of the authors still place it into its own Genus (Pyxidea), see discussion there. The genus occurs from Assam throughout Southeast Asia and central to southern China northeastwards to Japan, and southeastwards to the borders of the Wallacea and onto Indonesia and the Philippines.
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[edit] Description
Cuora species are characterized by a low (eg. Cuora pani) to high (eg. Cuora picturata) domed shell, which usually has three keels on the carapace. They are reddish, yellowish, brown grey and/or black in color. Some species have bright yellow, black, orange or white stripes down the length of the keels. Their body color is highly variable, but usually very intense. Most species show stripes of variable color down either side of the head, which usually meet at the nose.
[edit] Behaviour
Asian box turtles are terrestrial, semi-aquatic or mainly aquatic, most spending much of their time on the edge of shallow swamps, streams or pond that are dense with vegetation. Most are omnivorous, but carnivores do occur.
[edit] Taxonomy and systematics
- Amboina Box Turtle, Cuora amboinensis (3 subspecies)
- Javanese Box turtle Cuora amboinensis couro
- Malayan Box Turtle Cuora amboinensis kamaroma
- Lineated amboina Box Turtle Cuora amboinensis lineata
- Vietnamese Three-striped Box Turtle, Cuora cyclornata (1 subspecies)
- Northern Vietnamese or Meiers three-striped box turtle Cuora cyclornata meieri
- Yellow-margined Box Turtle, Chinese Box Turtle or Snake-eating Turtle, Cuora flavomarginata (2 subspecies)
- Ryukyu Yellow margined box turtle Cuora flavomarginata evelynae
- Chinese yellow margined box turtle Cuora flavomarginata sinensis
- Indochinese (Flowerback) Box Turtl Cuora galbinifrons (1 subspecies)
- Central Vietnamese or Annam Box Turtle, Cuora (galbinifrons) bourreti
- Southern Vietnamese Box Turtle, Cuora (galbinifrons) picturata
- McCord's Box Turtle, Cuora mccordi
- Pan's Box Turtle, Cuora pani = "Cuora chriskarannarum" (1 "possible" subspecies)
- Yellow-headed or Golden-headed Box Turtle, Cuora (pani) aurocapitata[1]
- Chinese Three-striped Box Turtle, Cuora trifasciata
- Yunnan Box Turtle, Cuora yunnanensis - rediscovered in 2004, verified in 2007.
- Zhou's Box Turtle, Cuora zhoui = "Cuora pallidicephala"
Cuora serrata, originally described as Cuora galbinifrons serrata by Iverson & Mccord (1992) and later considered a distinct species by Obst & Fritz (1997) are hybrids as shown by the genetic studies of Stuart & Parham (2004). These hybrids occur in the wild but not in Farms as speculated by former publications (e.g. Parham et al. 2001, Stuart & Parham, 2004)), this natural hybridization is sometimes regarded as "Evolution in Progress", and are the offspring of Keeled Box Turtle and taxa of the Indochinese Box Turtle complex, as suggested in Buskirk et al. (2005) and documented for the first time in the wild by Shi et al. (2005). Unnamed hybrids of several other Cuora taxa are also known (see Vetter & Van Dijk, 2006), as are intergeneric hybrids like Mauremys iversoni (Pritchard & Mccord, 1991), a hybrid between Cuora trifasciata and Mauremys mutica which are intentionally produced in Chinese turtle farms, see Parham et al. (2001).
[edit] In captivity
Wild caught C. amboinensis were frequently available in the exotic animal trade but are getting rarer now, other species are rare to commercially extinct. Most species' need for a semi-aquatic environment can make them a challenge to house properly. These turtles are not suitable for beginners - the cute babies usually sold will rapidly grow to adulthood and in some species become hefty animals, no less than a Herman's Tortoise in size -, and specimens of unknown provenance and/or without sufficient CITES documentation may be illegal to keep. They are not often captive-bred, due to the high care requirements, but acclimatized captive-bred individuals can be quite hardy. It is also very important - as with Geoemydidae in general - to properly identify taxa and keep them separate, as the risk of putting considerable effort into breeding them only to end with sterile hybridas is otherwise very real. Especially Cuora trifasciata males have a reputation of attempting to mate with any anatomically roughly compatible turtle.[2]
[edit] Footnotes
[edit] References
- Artner, H. (2004): Haltung und Nachzucht von Pan.s Scharnierschildkröte Cuora pani pani SONG, 1984 und der Goldkopf-Scharnierschildkröte Cuora pani aurocapitata LUO & ZONG, 1988. . Emys, 11(1) 2004: 4-21
- Blanck, T. & M. Tang (2005): Ein neuer Fundort von Cuora pani SONG, 1984 mit Diskussion über den taxonomischen Status von Cuora pani und Cuora aurocapitata. SACALIA 7 (3), 2005: 16-37
- Buskirk, James R.; Parham, James F. & Feldman, Chris R. (2005): On the hybridisation between two distantly related Asian turtles (Testudines: Sacalia × Mauremys). Salamandra 41: 21-26. PDF fulltext
- Iverson, J.B., McCord, W.P., 1992a. A new subspecies of Cuora galbinifrons (Testudines: Batagurinae) from Hainan Island,
China. Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, 105: 433-439.
- Obst, F.J. & Fritz, U. 1997: Zum taxonomischen Status von Cuora galbinifrons serrata IVERSON & MCCORD, 1992 und Pyxidea mouhotii (GRAY, 1862).- Zool. Abh. Mus. Tierkunde Dresden; 49: 261-279
- Parham, James Ford; Simison, W. Brian; Kozak, Kenneth H.; Feldman, Chris R. & Shi, Haitao (2001): New Chinese turtles: endangered or invalid? A reassessment of two species using mitochondrial DNA, allozyme electrophoresis and known-locality specimens. Animal Conservation 4(4): 357–367. HTML abstract Erratum: Animal Conservation 5(1): 86 HTML abstract
- Pritchard, P. C. H. & McCord, W. P. (1991). A new emydid turtle from China. Herpetol. 47: 138–147.
- Shi, H., J.F. Parham, W.B. Simison, J. Wang, S. Gong, and B. Fu (2005): A report on the hybridization between two species of threatened Asian box turtles (Testudines: Cuora) in the wild on Hainan Island (China) with comments on the origin of 'serrata'-like turtles. Amphibia-Reptilia, Volume 26, Number 3, 2005, pp. 377-381.