Keeled box turtle | |
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Nominate subspecies | |
Conservation status | |
Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Chordata |
Class: | Sauropsida |
Order: | Testudines |
Suborder: | Cryptodira |
Superfamily: | Testudinoidea |
Family: | Geoemydidae |
Subfamily: | Geoemydinae |
Genus: | Pyxidea (disputed) |
Species: | P. mouhotii |
Binomial name | |
Pyxidea mouhotii Gray, 1862 |
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Synonyms | |
Cuora mouhotii (but see text) |
The Keeled box turtle (Pyxidea mouhotii or Cuora mouhotii) is a species of the turtle family Geoemydidae found in China (Hainan & southwestern Guangxi and possibly southern Yunnan), northern and Central Vietnam, Laos, northern Cambodia, Thailand, Myanmar and Assam in India.
It is considered an endangered species by the IUCN[1] and in its native range hunted for use in folk medicine.[2]
Taxonomically, the species is either the only species within the genus Pyxidea, or is part of the main genus of Asian box turtles, Cuora (as Cuora mouhotii). Genetic analyses[3] have shown, that this species is very closely related to the genus Cuora.
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This turtle is characterized by a yellowish brown- to dark brown- or even black-colored carapace, with a distinctive keel running lengthwise down the center of it, and a yellowish, orange, red, brown or black head and limbs. It is not as aquatic as the typical species of Cuora but rather terrestrial, preferring only moderately moist habitats with plenty of vegetation and ground litter for cover. They grow to approximately 7 inches in length and are mainly carnivorous, some accepting fruits in captivity.
Females of the Indochinese box turtle (Cuora galbinifrons) complex hybridize – apparently in the wild – with Keeled box turtle males to produce the turtles once considered a separate species or subspecies Cuora (galbinifrons) serrata (see the Cuora article for more information).[4]
One subspecies has been described so far:
The populations from Myanmar and India might represent another yet undescribed subspecies.
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