Spiny softshell turtle

Spiny softshell turtle
Conservation status
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Sauropsida
Order: Testudines
Suborder: Cryptodira
Family: Trionychidae
Genus: Apalone
Species: A. spinifera
Binomial name
Apalone spinifera
(Lesueur, 1827)
Synonyms[1]

Trionyx spiniferus Lesueur, 1827
Trionyx ocellatus Lesueur, 1827
Apalone hudsonica Rafinesque, 1832
Gymnopus spiniferus Duméril & Bibron, 1835
Trionyx annulifer Wied, 1839
Tyrse argus J. E. Gray, 1844
Trionyx annulatus J. E. Gray, 1856 (ex errore)
Trionyx argus J. E. Gray, 1856
Gymnopodus spiniferus Duméril, 1856
Aspidonectes nuchalis Agassiz, 1857
Aspidonectes spinifer Agassiz, 1857
Gymnopus olivaceus Wied, 1865
Callinia spinifera J. E. Gray, 1869
Platypeltis nuchalis Baur, 1893
Platypeltis spinifer Baur, 1893
Tyrse spinifera Hay, 1904
Amyda spinifera Hay, 1905
Platypeltis spinifera Hay, 1907
Amyda spinifera Stejneger & Barbour, 1917
Apalone spinifera Meylan, 1987

The Spiny softshell turtle (Apalone spinifera) is a species of softshell turtle, one of the largest freshwater turtle species in North America. They get their name from the spiny, cone-like projections on the leading edge of their carapace, which are not scutes (scales).

Contents

Geographic range

The spiny softshell has a wide range, extending throughout much of the United States, as well as north into the Canadian provinces of Ontario and Quebec, and south into the Mexican states of Tamaulipas, Nuevo León, Coahuila, Chihuahua, Baja California, Morelos,and Honduras.

Taxonomy

The species was first described by Charles Alexandre Lesueur in 1827. It has been redescribed numerous times, leading to some confusion in its taxonomy. There are now seven recognized subspecies, which vary primarily by geography, and are not easily distinguishable from one another.

Reproduction

The spiny softshell mates with other turtles between ages 8 and 10. A large female turtle may live up to 50 years. The turtles mate in mid to late spring in deep water. The male will nudge the female's head while swimming and if she chooses to mate, the male will swim above the female without clasping her with his claws (this is unlike other turtles). The turtle quickly lays her eggs along a sunny sandbar or gravel bank in a flask-shaped cavity that she has dug close to the water. The turtle nests more than once during a single season. She can lay between 9 to 38 round calcareous-shelled eggs. The eggs hatch around August and September and hatch in the spring. Sex is not determined by temperature variations in the spiny soft shell turtle.

Subspecies

References

  1. ^ Fritz, Uwe and Havaš, Peter. 2007. Checklist of Chelonians of the World. Museum für Tierkunde Dresden. Dresden.

External links