Life History Account for Spiny Softshell
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AN INTRODUCTION to Texas Turtles
TEXAS PARKS AND WILDLIFE AN INTRODUCTION TO Texas Turtles Mark Klym An Introduction to Texas Turtles Turtle, tortoise or terrapin? Many people get confused by these terms, often using them interchangeably. Texas has a single species of tortoise, the Texas tortoise (Gopherus berlanderi) and a single species of terrapin, the diamondback terrapin (Malaclemys terrapin). All of the remaining 28 species of the order Testudines found in Texas are called “turtles,” although some like the box turtles (Terrapene spp.) are highly terrestrial others are found only in marine (saltwater) settings. In some countries such as Great Britain or Australia, these terms are very specific and relate to the habit or habitat of the animal; in North America they are denoted using these definitions. Turtle: an aquatic or semi-aquatic animal with webbed feet. Tortoise: a terrestrial animal with clubbed feet, domed shell and generally inhabiting warmer regions. Whatever we call them, these animals are a unique tie to a period of earth’s history all but lost in the living world. Turtles are some of the oldest reptilian species on the earth, virtually unchanged in 200 million years or more! These slow-moving, tooth less, egg-laying creatures date back to the dinosaurs and still retain traits they used An Introduction to Texas Turtles | 1 to survive then. Although many turtles spend most of their lives in water, they are air-breathing animals and must come to the surface to breathe. If they spend all this time in water, why do we see them on logs, rocks and the shoreline so often? Unlike birds and mammals, turtles are ectothermic, or cold- blooded, meaning they rely on the temperature around them to regulate their body temperature. -
Eastern Spiny Softshell
Eastern Spiny Softshell The Eastern Spiny Softshell Turtle, an introduced species, is unlike any other species of turtle in New Jersey, with its leathery, flattened shell, and its long narrow snout. Eastern Spiny Softshell Introduced Species - Pl.7 (Apalone spinifera spinifera) Identification: Adult females 6 1/2" - 18", males 5" - 9 1/4". The Eastern Spiny Softshell is almost perfectly round with a very flattened, leathery carapace that lacks scutes. Also note the characteristic long, narrow, tubular snout. Three characteristics that distinguish this from other softshells (which are not found in New Jersey) are streaked and spotted feet, a horizontal ridge in each nostril, and small spiny projections on the carapace. The carapace is light tan, like wet sand; a thin dark line encircles the carapace near the rim. The carapace of the male is marked with dark, round spots, while the female may be somewhat darker and more mottled. Where to find them: The Eastern Spiny Softshell is typically limited to rivers; however, it can also be found in lakes where mud bars are available. It is sometimes seen floating at the surface, where the shape is easily identifiable. Be careful if handling this species: it can claw and bite fiercely. When to find them: Active May through September. Range: An introduced and well-established population in the Maurice River system, Cumberland County and in the Raritan River Watershed. Eastern Spiny Softshell (Apalone spinifera spinifera) - text pg. 16 Key Features - Long, narrow, and tubular snout. - Carapace: flattened, leathery, and lacking scutes. - Light tan or brown in color. New Jersey Division of Fish and Wildlife ~ 2003 Excerpt from: Schwartz, V. -
Spiny Softshell Turtle: What You Can Do to Help the Spiny Softshell Turtle (Apalone Spinifera) Is a Medium to Large-Sized Freshwater Turtle
Saving Spiny Softshell Turtle: What you can do to help The Spiny Softshell Turtle (Apalone spinifera) is a medium to large-sized freshwater turtle. Females can grow more than 4 times as big as males. Their carapace (top shell) is olive to tan, flat, round, keelless (no raised ridge down the centre of the shell), and leathery. The surface of the carapace may be slightly rough, like sandpaper, especially in adult males. Adult males have black circles on their carapace but females have a mottled or blotched pattern. The head and legs are green to gray, with a pattern of dark spots and yellowish-green stripes. The tubular snout has large nostrils, the lips are yellowish with dark spots, and the jaws are sharp. All four feet are webbed, and the webbing Photo: Scott Gillingwater extends up the back legs. Do you live near Spiny Softshell Field check Turtles? Long neck In the Carolinian zone the Spiny Softshell Turtle Long snout can be found in Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie Very flat, leathery, olive to brownish (including major tributaries like the Thames and coloured carapace Sydenham Rivers), and western Lake Ontario. They live in soft-bottomed rivers and lakes. They Very fast on land and in water are often seen at or just downstream of river Buries into the mud and then wiggles bends. They spend a lot of time basking on to settle the mud over the shell sunlit riverbanks, logs, rocks, and some artificial structures. They hunt for food in riffles, creeks, shallow inlets, and areas with vegetative debris and aquatic plants. -
RELATIVE ABUNDANCE of SPINEY SOFTSHELL TURTLES (Apalone Spinifera) on the MISSOURI and YELLOWSTONE RIVERS in MONTANA FINAL REPOR
RELATIVE ABUNDANCE OF SPINEY SOFTSHELL TURTLES (Apalone spinifera) ON THE MISSOURI AND YELLOWSTONE RIVERS IN MONTANA FINAL REPORT Arnold R. Dood, Brad Schmitz, Vic Riggs, Nate McClenning, Matt Jeager, Dave Fuller, Ryan Rauscher, Steve Leathe, Dave Moore, JoAnn Dullum, John Ensign, Scott Story, Mike Backes Abstract In 2003, the Missouri River Natural Resources Committee (MRNRC) Wildlife Section advocated developing a survey for the relative abundance of softshell turtles (Apalone sp.) on the Missouri River system. Softshell turtles were selected because they occur throughout the system and there was some information suggesting that they may have been impacted by system operations. As a common riverine species, there were possibilities that softshell turtles may have been impacted because of the timing, level, and temperature of river flows as well as by dam construction and bank stabilization. In addition, there were reports from other areas in the species range that they may be especially sensitive to human disturbance. From 2004 through 2008, State and Federal agencies and Pacific Power and Light in Montana sampled the Missouri River from Great Falls, MT, to the confluence of the Missouri and Yellowstone (except Fort Peck Reservoir) as well as they Yellowstone River from above Billings to the confluence. Sampling consisted of setting turtle traps every two river miles and checking for three days. Turtles captured were measured, marked, and released. Results of the sampling efforts indicated high relative densities above Fort Peck Reservoir and variable densities on the Yellowstone. No spiny softshells were found below Fort Peck or on the Yellowstone below Sidney, MT. Possible reasons are presented and recommendations for future program direction as well as potential system modifications to benefit this species are discussed. -
Parasites of Florida Softshell Turtles (Apalone Ferox} from Southeastern Florida
J. Helminthol. Soc. Wash. 65(1), 1998 pp. 62-64 Parasites of Florida Softshell Turtles (Apalone ferox} from Southeastern Florida GARRY W. FOSTER,1-3 JOHN M. KINSELLA,' PAUL E. MoLER,2 LYNN M. JOHNSON,- AND DONALD J. FORRESTER' 1 Department of Pathobiology, College of Veterinary Medicine, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida 32611 (e-mail:[email protected]; [email protected]; [email protected]) and 2 Florida Game and Fresh Water Fish Commission, Gainesville, Florida 32601 (e-mail: pmoler®wrl.gfc.state.fi.us) ABSTRACT: A total of 15 species of helminths (4 trematodes, 1 monogenean, 1 cestode, 5 nematodes, 4 acan- thocephalans) and 1 pentastomid was collected from 58 Florida softshell turtles (Apalone ferox) from south- eastern Florida. Spiroxys amydae (80%), Cephalogonimiis vesicaudus (80%), Vasotrema robiistum (76%), and Proteocephalus sp. (63%) were the most prevalent helminths. Significant lesions were associated with the at- tachment sites of Spiroxys amydae in the stomach wall. Contracaecum multipapillatum and Polymorphus brevis are reported for the first time in reptiles. The pentastomid Alofia sp. is reported for the first time in North America and in turtles. KEY WORDS: Softshell turtle, Apalone ferox, helminths, pentastomes, Florida. The Florida softshell turtle (Apalone ferox) softshell turtles from southeastern Florida are ranges from southern South Carolina, through discussed. southern Georgia to Mobile Bay, Alabama, and all of Florida except the Keys (Conant and Col- Methods lins, 1991). Where it is sympatric with the Gulf A total of 58 Florida softshell turtles was examined. Coast spiny softshell turtle (Apalone spinifera Fifty-seven were obtained from a commercial proces- asperd) in the Florida panhandle, the Florida sor in Palm Beach County, Florida, between 1993 and softshell is found more often in lacustrine hab- 1995. -
A Field Guide to South Dakota Turtles
A Field Guide to SOUTH DAKOTA TURTLES EC919 South Dakota State University | Cooperative Extension Service | USDA U.S. Geological Survey | South Dakota Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit South Dakota Department of Game, Fish & Parks This publication may be cited as: Bandas, Sarah J., and Kenneth F. Higgins. 2004. Field Guide to South Dakota Turtles. SDCES EC 919. Brookings: South Dakota State University. Copies may be obtained from: Dept. of Wildlife & Fisheries Sciences South Dakota State University Box 2140B, NPBL Brookings SD 57007-1696 South Dakota Dept of Game, Fish & Parks 523 E. Capitol, Foss Bldg Pierre SD 57501 SDSU Bulletin Room ACC Box 2231 Brookings, SD 57007 (605) 688–4187 A Field Guide to SOUTH DAKOTA TURTLES EC919 South Dakota State University | Cooperative Extension Service | USDA U.S. Geological Survey | South Dakota Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit South Dakota Department of Game, Fish & Parks Sarah J. Bandas Department of Wildlife and Fisheries Sciences South Dakota State University NPB Box 2140B Brookings, SD 57007 Kenneth F. Higgins U.S. Geological Survey South Dakota Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit South Dakota State University NPB Box 2140B Brookings, SD 57007 Contents 2 Introduction . .3 Status of South Dakota turtles . .3 Fossil record and evolution . .4 General turtle information . .4 Taxonomy of South Dakota turtles . .9 Capturing techniques . .10 Turtle handling . .10 Turtle habitats . .13 Western Painted Turtle (Chrysemys picta bellii) . .15 Snapping Turtle (Chelydra serpentina) . .17 Spiny Softshell Turtle (Apalone spinifera) . .19 Smooth Softshell Turtle (Apalone mutica) . .23 False Map Turtle (Graptemys pseudogeographica) . .25 Western Ornate Box Turtle (Terrapene ornata ornata) . -
Color Variation Among Habitat Types in the Spiny Softshell Turtles (Trionychidae: Apalone) of Cuatrocie´Negas, Coahuila, Mexico
Journal of Herpetology, Vol. 42, No. 2, pp. 347–353, 2008 Copyright 2008 Society for the Study of Amphibians and Reptiles Color Variation among Habitat Types in the Spiny Softshell Turtles (Trionychidae: Apalone) of Cuatrocie´negas, Coahuila, Mexico SUZANNE E. MCGAUGH Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Organismal Biology, Iowa State University, Ames, Iowa 50011, USA; E-mail: [email protected] ABSTRACT.—Ground coloration is highly variable in many reptile species. In turtles, ground color may correspond well to the background coloration of the environment and can change over time to match new surroundings in the laboratory. Variable carapace and plastron coloration across three habitat types were investigated in the Black Softshell Turtle, Apalone spinifera atra, by measuring individual components of the RGB (Red, Green, Blue) color system. In general, A. s. atra carapaces were darker in turtles from lagoons than in turtles from playa lakes. Red and green values were significantly different among all pairs of habitat types, but blue values differed only between the playa lakes and lagoons. Mean color components (RG only) for each population were significantly correlated with corresponding values for the bottom substrate, indicating a positive association of carapace and habitat substrate color components. In contrast, plastron ground color RGB channels showed no significant differences between habitat types and no significant correlations with substrate RGB. These results suggest that dorsal background matching in A. s. atra may be responsible for some of the variation in this key taxonomic trait. The color of an organism is an important spinifera emoryi (Winokur, 1968), but adults component of many aspects of an organism’s show marked differences in coloration across biology and is often used as a taxonomic habitats (this study), which could be a result character (Endler, 1990; Brodie and Janzen, of genetically based ontogenetic pigmenta- 1995; Darst and Cummings, 2006). -
Annual Report on Conservation and Science INTRODUCTION 2
2013 Annual Report on Conservation and Science INTRODUCTION 2 2013 Annual Report on Conservation and Science Highlights The Association of Zoos and Aquariums’ (AZA) 2013 Annual Report on Conservation and Science (ARCS) celebrates the activities of AZA-accredited zoos and aquariums and certified related facilities in the following areas: » field conservation » mission-related research » education programming » sustainable (green) business practices Each of these areas has been carefully defined to maximize consistency of reporting and enhance data quality. Field conservation focuses on efforts having a direct impact on animals and habitats in the wild. Education programming includes those with specific goals and delivery methods, defined content, and a clear primary discipline and target audience. Mission-related research projects involve application of the scientific method and is therefore hypothesis (or question)-driven, involves systematic data collection and analysis of those data, and draws conclusions from the research process. Sustainable (green) business practices cover related staff support, purchasing policies, and education and outreach initiatives, as well as the management of six key resources: chemicals, energy, fuel, waste, water, and construction. While previous reports focused exclusively on field conservation, this is the first year all four of these areas are featured. Because of the history of reporting field conservation efforts, readers of this report will notice a discrepancy in response rates between field conservation (over 86 percent response rate) and the three new areas (approximately 52 percent for each area). AZA fully anticipates that response rates in future reports will increase across the four areas as the AZA community becomes more familiarized with the related data collection and reporting processes. -
BULLETIN Chicago Herpetological Society
BULLETIN of the Chicago Herpetological Society Volume 54, Number 5 May 2019 BULLETIN OF THE CHICAGO HERPETOLOGICAL SOCIETY Volume 54, Number 5 May 2019 A New Record of the Nile Soft-shelled Turtle, Trionyx triunguis, in Lebanon . Piero Carlino, Nahed Msayleb, Hasan Hamza and Olivier S. G. Pauwels 101 The Rantoul–Paxton Railroad Corridor: Relictual Herpetofauna and Noteworthy Records . Tristan D. Schramer 104 Toad Stools: Part Four . Dennis A. Meritt Jr. 108 Possible Parthenogenesis in the Two-striped Garter Snake, Thamnophis hammondii . Jeremy Fontaine and Thomas Owens 109 Some Natural History Observations and Photos of the Nesting Behavior of Desert Tortoises in Arizona . Roger A. Repp 110 What You Missed at the April Meeting: Chris Lechowicz . .John Archer 114 Advertisements . 116 New CHS Members This Month . 116 Cover: Red-eyed treefrog, Agalychnis callidryas. Drawing by Jessica Wadleigh. STAFF Membership in the CHS includes a subscription to the monthly Bulletin. Annual dues are: Individual Membership, $25.00; Editor: Michael A. Dloogatch --- [email protected] Family Membership, $28.00; Sustaining Membership, $50.00; Copy editor: Joan Moore Contributing Membership, $100.00; Institutional Membership, Photo editor: Steve Barten $38.00. Remittance must be made in U.S. funds. Subscribers outside the U.S. must add $12.00 for postage. Send membership 2019 CHS Board of Directors dues or address changes to: Chicago Herpetological Society, Membership Secretary, 2430 N. Cannon Drive, Chicago, IL 60614. President: Rich Crowley Vice-president: Jessica Wadleigh Manuscripts published in the Bulletin of the Chicago Herpeto- Treasurer: John Archer logical Society are not peer reviewed. Manuscripts and letters Recording Secretary: Gail Oomens concerning editorial business should be e-mailed to the editor, Media Secretary: Kim Klisiak [email protected]. -
Species Assessment for Eastern Spiny Softshell
Species Status Assessment Class: Reptilia Family: Trionychidae Scientific Name: Apalone spinifera spinifera Common Name: Eastern spiny softshell Species synopsis: The spiny softshell is an aquatic turtle that occurs in lakes and large rivers and their associated wetlands. It is found in the central portion of the United States, reaching the eastern extent of its range in New York; there is a disjunct population in the Vermont waters of Lake Champlain. The eastern spiny softshell turtle was previously known as Trionyx spiniferus spiniferus, and is the only species in this family found in New York. Several other subspecies are known from North America. Spiny softshell turtles in Lake Champlain may be genetically unique (Weisrock and Janzen 2000); none have been found on the New York side of the lake. Shoreline development is the most significant threat to spiny softshell turtles. I. Status a. Current and Legal Protected Status i. Federal ____ __Not Listed_____________________ Candidate? ___No____ ii. New York ______Special Concern; SGCN___________________________________ b. Natural Heritage Program Rank i. Global ______G5__________________________________________________________ ii. New York ______S2S3________________ Tracked by NYNHP? ___Yes___ Other Rank: IUCN – Least Concern Species of High Concern (NEPARC 2010) 1 Status Discussion: This species is listed as Threatened in Vermont. Lake Champlain is the only known location of the spiny softshell turtle in New England. It occurs only on the Vermont side of the lake and has not been documented on the New York side (Kart et al. 2005, Gibbs et al. 2007). It has been extirpated from Quebec portions of Lake Champlain. NEPARC (2010) lists spiny softshell as a species of high concern because more than 50% of northeastern states list it as SGCN. -
Spiny Softshell Turtle Once the Hook Is Removed, Release the Turtle Threatened in Vermont
How To Release a Hooked Turtle Estimates for the Missisquoi Bay population range from Vermont’s n odd 120 to 200. No population has ever been documented Bait on a fi shhook may look like a tasty meal to a turtle Alooking on the New York side of Lake Champlain and no but this can lead to accidental hooking. Sometimes an turtle to other populations are currently known to exist in New unlucky cast will snag a turtle’s shell or leg. Spiny Softshell be sure, England or Quebec. the spiny Here’s how to remove hooks and prevent unnecessary Given the rare nature of this unique turtle and the softshell death to the unfortunate animal. limited habitat, it is important to avoid the loss or Turtle is easily degradation of suitable habitat. If we respect the needs Grasp the carapace (upper shell) near the tail with your distinguished of these threatened turtles, we can hopefully enjoy this thumbs up. Don’t hold by the tail. from other DIANE PENCE unique species for generations to come. This can injure a turtle. Hold the turtles found turtle with its head down and in Vermont by their very pointed snout and their leathery belly towards you, well away shell. But these are not the only things that make this from your body. shy turtle unique. Venise-en-Quebec Or, support the turtle with one Spiny softshells depend on beaches for their hand underneath the lower shell survival. They need undisturbed sand or gravel (plastron) and hold the base of beaches to lay their eggs. -
Chelonian Advisory Group Regional Collection Plan 4Th Edition December 2015
Association of Zoos and Aquariums (AZA) Chelonian Advisory Group Regional Collection Plan 4th Edition December 2015 Editor Chelonian TAG Steering Committee 1 TABLE OF CONTENTS Introduction Mission ...................................................................................................................................... 3 Steering Committee Structure ........................................................................................................... 3 Officers, Steering Committee Members, and Advisors ..................................................................... 4 Taxonomic Scope ............................................................................................................................. 6 Space Analysis Space .......................................................................................................................................... 6 Survey ........................................................................................................................................ 6 Current and Potential Holding Table Results ............................................................................. 8 Species Selection Process Process ..................................................................................................................................... 11 Decision Tree ........................................................................................................................... 13 Decision Tree Results .............................................................................................................