Kinosternidae

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Kinosternidae
Common Musk TurtleSternotherus odoratus
Common Musk Turtle
Sternotherus odoratus
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Sauropsida
Order: Testudines
Suborder: Cryptodira
Superfamily: Kinosternoidea
Family: Kinosternidae
Agassiz, 1857
Genera

Kinosternon
Sternotherus
Claudius
Staurotypus

Kinosternidae is a family of mostly small turtles that includes the mud and musk turtles. The family Kinosternidae contains 25 species within 4 genera, but taxonomic reclassification is an ongoing process so many sources vary on the exact numbers of species and subspecies. They inhabit slow-moving bodies of water, often with soft, muddy bottoms and abundant vegetation.

Contents

[edit] Description

Most kinosternids are small turtles, between 4 and 6 inches with a heavily domed shell that has a distinct keel down its center. The genus Staurotypus gets much larger, to 12 inches. Females are generally larger than males, but males have a much longer tail. They can be black, brown, green, or yellowish in color. Most species do not have shell markings, but some species have radiating black markings on each carapace scute. Some species have distinctive yellow striping along the sides of their head and neck.

The musk turtles are so named because they are capable of releasing a foul smelling musk from glands under the rear of their shell when disturbed. They are native to North and South America.

[edit] Diet

All members of the family are carnivores, feeding on crustaceans, aquatic insects, mollusks, annelids, amphibians, small fish, and sometimes carrion.

[edit] Reproduction

Kinosternids lay approximately four hard-shelled eggs during the late spring and early summer. After hatching, some species overwinter in the subterranean nest, emerging the following spring. Some adults also spend the winter on land, constructing a burrow with a small air hole that is used on warm days.

Kinosternids contain the only species of turtle known, or at least suspected, to exhibit parental care. Studies of the yellow mud turtle in Nebraska, USA, suggest females sometimes stay with the nest and may urinate on the eggs long after laying, to either keep them moist or to protect them from snake predation (by making them less palatable).

[edit] Taxonomy

Family Kinosternidae
Subfamily Kinosterninae

Mississippi Mud Turtle, Kinosternon subrubrum hippocrepis
Mississippi Mud Turtle, Kinosternon subrubrum hippocrepis
Razorback Musk Turtle, Sternotherus carinatus
Razorback Musk Turtle, Sternotherus carinatus

Subfamily Staurotypinae

[edit] References