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Chicken turtle

The chicken turtle (Deirochelys reticularia) is a turtle native to the southeastern United States. It is the only extant member of the genus Deirochelys and is a member of the freshwater marsh turtle family Emydidae. The chicken turtle's scientific name refers to its extremely long neck and distinctive net-like pattern on its upper shell. There are three regionally distinct subspecies (eastern, western and Florida), which are thought to have evolved when populations became separated during periods of glaciation. These subspecies can be distinguished by their appearance; the western chicken turtle displays dark markings along the seams of its plastron (lower shell), while the plastron of the Florida subspecies is a bright yellow or orange color. Fossil records show that the chicken turtle has been present in the region for up to five million years.

Chicken turtle
Temporal range: 5–0 Ma
Pliocenerecent[1]
Chicken turtle on land

Secure  (NatureServe)[2]
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Reptilia
Order: Testudines
Suborder: Cryptodira
Superfamily: Testudinoidea
Family: Emydidae
Subfamily: Deirochelyinae
Genus: Deirochelys
Species:
D. reticularia
Binomial name
Deirochelys reticularia
(Latreille, 1801)
Subspecies[3]

D. r. chrysea Schwartz, 1956
D. r. miaria Schwartz, 1956
D. r. reticularia Latreille, 1801

Synonyms
Species synonymy[4][5][6]
  • Testudo reticularia
    Latreille, 1801
  • Testudo reticulata
    Daudin, 1801
  • Emys reticularia
    Schweigger, 1814
  • Emys reticulata
    Say, 1824
  • Terrapene reticulata
    Bonaparte, 1831
  • Clemmys reticulata
    Fitzinger, 1835
  • Deirochelys reticulata
    Agassiz, 1857
  • Clemmys reticularia
    Strauch, 1862
  • Chrysemys reticulata
    Cope, 1875
  • Dirochelys reticularia
    Baur, 1890
  • Hirochelys reticulata
    Beyer, 1900

Chicken turtles inhabit shallow, still or slow-moving bodies of water with plenty of vegetation and a muddy substrate. They are not found in rivers or deeper lakes that may be home to predators such as alligators and large fish. The chicken turtle is predominantly carnivorous and feeds mostly on invertebrates such as crayfish, dragonflies and spiders, but is also known to eat tadpoles, carrion and occasionally plant material. It is an active hunter and its long neck allows it to catch fast-moving prey. Although feeding and mating take place in aquatic environments, the chicken turtle is very well adapted to living on land and may spend more than half the year out of the water. Like many reptiles, it spends much of the day basking in the sun to regulate its body temperature, but unlike most other aquatic turtles, it hibernates over the winter months except in the warmer, southernmost reaches of its range.

The chicken turtle is relatively small compared to other related turtles, with males measuring up to around 16.5 cm (6.5 in) and females around 26.0 cm (10.2 in). It is also one of the world's shortest-lived turtles, reaching a maximum age of 20–24 years. There are thought to be around 100,000 adult chicken turtles in the wild. Although the population as a whole is considered secure, its status in some areas is less certain and several states have listed it as threatened or introduced regulations to manage hunting or taking. The word "chicken" in the turtle's vernacular name is apparently a reference to the taste of its meat, which was once popular in turtle soup and commonly sold in southern markets.

Taxonomy and evolution edit

 
Drawing accompanying Latreille's 1801 description of Testudo reticularia

The species was first described in 1801 independently by two French zoologists: as Testudo reticularia by Pierre André Latreille,[7] and as Testudo reticulata by François Marie Daudin.[8] Both descriptions were based on drawings and a single specimen collected by Louis Augustin Guillaume Bosc in the vicinity of Charleston, South Carolina some years previously.[9] Subsequent studies placed the chicken turtle into various related genera (Emys, Clemmys and Terrapene)[5][10] before Louis Agassiz assigned it to the current genus in 1857.[11] He distinguished D. reticularia from other North American members of the family Emydidae by the length of its neck, and from the Australian Chelodina by the articulation of the neck vertebrae.[12] In his 1940 comparison of Latreille and Daudin's original descriptions, naturalist Francis Harper determined that Latreille's had been published first, hence the currently accepted specific name.[13]

The chicken turtle is the only extant species in the genus Deirochelys.[1][14] Its parent family is Emydidae, the freshwater marsh turtles, which are found on every continent except Australia and Antarctica.[15] The name of the genus is derived from the Ancient Greek words for "neck" (deirḗ) and "tortoise" (khélūs), a reference to the species' particularly long neck. The species name reticularia comes from the Latin for "net-like" or "reticulated" (reticulatus), probably alluding to the turtle's patterned carapace (top shell).[16]

Subspecies edit

There are three distinct subspecies of chicken turtle, as described by Albert Schwartz in 1956 from a study of 325 specimens:[10][17]

  • The eastern chicken turtle (D. r. reticularia) is the turtle originally described by Latreille in 1801. It is the largest of the chicken turtles, with males measuring up to 16.5 cm (6.5 in) and females up to 26.0 cm (10.2 in).[18] It is distinguished from the other subspecies by the coloring of its carapace, which is olive to brown with a yellow rim.[3] The plastron (lower shell) sometimes features a spot or indistinct splotch of color.[19] Its outstretched neck is especially long, sometimes as long as the carapace itself.[20]
  • The Florida chicken turtle (D. r. chrysea) has the most distinctively patterned carapace of all the chicken turtles, featuring bold, broad yellow-orange reticulation.[3] The shell is cuneiform (wedge-shaped), especially so in males and juvenile turtles,[21] and measures up to 16.5 cm (6.5 in) for males and 25.0 cm (9.8 in) for females.[22] The subspecies name chrysea is taken from the Latin for "golden one" due to the bright yellow or orange color of its plastron.[23][21]
  • The western chicken turtle (D. r. miaria) is the smallest of the three subspecies; males have a maximum carapace length of 16.1 cm (6.3 in) and females 21.0 cm (8.3 in).[22] The stripes on its head and neck are lighter in color (cream or pale yellow) compared to other chicken turtles,[24] and its plastron features a dark pattern along the seams.[25] The subspecies epithet miaria derives from the Greek for "stained", referring to this patterning.[26] Its carapace is oval in shape and flatter than that of the other subspecies.[27]
 
The plastron of the eastern chicken turtle (D. r. reticularia) sometimes features an indistinct splotch of color

Schwartz considered that D. r. reticularia is probably most reminiscent of the ancestors of Deirochelys, and that the other two subspecies most likely developed from it.[28] The western chicken turtle is the most divergent of the three subspecies, suggesting a longer period of separation, possibly after populations were cut off from one another during a period of glaciation. Similarly, D. r. chrysea developed from a later population separation, a common phenomenon on the geographically diverse Florida peninsula.[28] Studies of the chicken turtle's mitochondrial DNA support this theory of earlier divergence of the western subspecies from the two eastern ones.[29] It is thought that the Mississippi River prevents intergradation (the presence of populations sharing characteristics of two subspecies) between D. r. miaria and D. r. reticularia since the chicken turtle does not generally inhabit rivers or moving water.[28] Intergrades of the eastern and Florida chicken turtles are known, however, with several specimens having been collected in north-central Florida.[19]

Fossil record edit

Ancestors of the chicken turtle and related turtles of the genus Chrysemys may have been present in North America for up to 40 million years.[30] Writing in 1978, Dale Jackson considered D. reticularia to have "one of the most complete evolutionary records of any Recent turtle".[31] Fossils have been found throughout its current range; examples dating from the Pliocene (roughly 5.33 to 2.58 million years ago) to the sub-Recent (prior to the start of the Holocene, or Recent, epoch around 11,700 years ago) have been discovered in Florida,[32][33] in addition to fossils in Pleistocene deposits in South Carolina.[32] A fossil found in Alachua County, Florida dating from the middle Pliocene was originally thought to belong to D. reticularia, but was later identified by Jackson as an extinct relative, D. carri.[34] This species was somewhat larger than its modern relative and its shell roughly twice as thick.[35] Other fossil fragments from the Hemingfordian (20.6 to 16.3 million years ago) are considered to belong to even earlier, more primitive members of the genus.[32]

Description edit

 
Large adult chicken turtle with the reticulated pattern on the carapace clearly visible

The chicken turtle resembles the painted turtle (Chrysemys picta) and some species of cooter (genus Pseudemys) in appearance, but has an unusually long neck that is close to the length of its shell.[36] It often also has black blotches on the underside of the bridge (the part of the shell connecting the carapace and plastron), which are not present in these other species.[20] The carapace of the chicken turtle is elongated and pear-shaped, with the rear half noticeably wider than the front.[37][38] It ranges from dark green to brown in color,[39] and features a distinctive yellowish net-like pattern across its entire upper surface.[40] The scutes of the upper shell have a ridged or wrinkled texture and are rough to the touch.[3] Beneath its shell, the chicken turtle has particularly slender ribs, supposedly developed to accommodate its long, muscular neck.[33] Although the chicken turtle shares morphological features with Blanding's turtle (Emydoidea blandingii), such as these elongated ribs and the shape of the skull, DNA analysis has shown they are not closely related.[41]

Descriptions of the chicken turtle disagree on the base color of its skin but it is generally reported to be darker than the carapace, varying from olive to brown to black.[10][20][40] One of the distinguishing features of D. reticularia is a broad yellow stripe on the forelegs.[36] The skin of the neck and head also has light stripes, although narrower, while the tail and rear legs show vertical yellow markings.[42] The head itself is elongated with a somewhat pointed snout but no other distinguishing features,[43] and the digits of the feet are webbed and tipped with claws.[7]

Compared to other turtles, the chicken turtle is small to medium in size. Adults vary in length from around 10–25 cm (4–10 in),[3] with an average length of around 13 cm (5 in).[33] The width of the carapace is roughly 65 percent of its length.[33] Mature chicken turtles exhibit some degree of sexual dimorphism; the females are larger and heavier than males, although the males have longer, thicker tails.[10][36] Unlike the painted turtle, there is no difference between the sexes in terms of the length of the foreclaws.[10]

Chicken turtle hatchlings measure approximately 28–32 mm (1.1–1.3 in) and weigh around 8–9 g (0.28–0.32 oz).[36] The shell is much rounder than the adults',[44] and the shell and skin are considerably brighter in color,[45] with a greater number of light stripes.[42] The young of the western chicken turtle hatches with the distinctive dark markings on its plastron already present.[45]

Distribution edit

Range edit

The chicken turtle is found throughout the southeastern United States; its range extends from the Atlantic coastal plain and states such as North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia and Florida westward through the Gulf plain towards the Mississippi River. It tends to remain in coastal areas and is largely absent from the Piedmont plateau and more mountainous regions in the north of these states.[46] West of the river, its territory reaches as far north as Missouri and as far west as Oklahoma and central Texas.[47] Across its range, the chicken turtle may inhabit many hundreds or possibly thousands of wetland sites, although populations in any particular location are generally small.[2]

Eastern chicken turtle edit

 
Cypress swamp in First Landing State Park, Virginia—it is unclear whether chicken turtles are still present here

The eastern chicken turtle is the most widespread of the three subspecies, with specimens known from eight states. The main bulk of its territory begins on the eastern banks of the Mississippi River in southeast Louisiana and extends eastward along the coastal plain of the Gulf of Mexico. Apart from the coastal region in the south of the state, it is not present in most of Mississippi, save for a small population in the drainage basin of the Tombigbee River.[18] In Alabama, it is again commonly found throughout the coastal plain in the southern half of the state. It is also present further north in the Ridge and Valley region of the Appalachian mountain range, although less common.[20]

Through Georgia, South Carolina and North Carolina, the eastern chicken turtle is again widely found throughout the coastal regions, although specimens have been recorded further inland in North Carolina.[18] It is abundant in northern Florida, especially in the Panhandle region, where it is the only subspecies present. Its range begins to overlap with the Florida chicken turtle towards the north-central part of the state, with intergrades having been identified in Taylor, Levy, Gilchrist and Clay counties.[21]

The eastern chicken turtle is also present in Virginia, although it is very rare there. A small colony was known to inhabit First Landing State Park in Virginia, but several studies have only managed to locate one adult female and it is thought this population may be extirpated. Around 40 mi (64 km) to the west, a small group of around 30 adults is present in Isle of Wight County.[48] Neither of these locations is contiguous with the rest of the turtle's range; it is unclear whether these populations are relics of a native and formerly more widespread group, or whether they were introduced to the area.[21]

Florida chicken turtle edit

As its name suggests, the Florida chicken turtle is native to Florida and is only found within the state. It is relatively widespread throughout the central and southern portions of the state, although it is absent from the Florida Keys.[21]

Western chicken turtle edit

The western chicken turtle's range is generally restricted to locations west of the Mississippi River, although specimens have been found on the river's eastern banks in northwest Mississippi state.[21] Its range extends from the coastal plain of the Gulf of Mexico in Texas and Louisiana, northward into the south and east of Oklahoma and through Arkansas towards Missouri. It may once have been common in the swampland of Missouri's Bootheel region, but is now only found in a few small groups in the extreme southeast of the state.[49] Its territory is also decreasing in Arkansas; diffuse groups are now found only in the northern reaches of the Gulf coastal plain in the south of the state, as well as some regions of the Arkansas River Valley.[50] The western chicken turtle is reasonably uncommon in Texas but its population there is secure. It inhabits the drainage basins of several rivers in the eastern half of the state, such as the Sabine and the Neches.[39]

Habitat edit

Chicken turtles are semiaquatic, equally comfortable in wetland habitats and on land. All three subspecies have similar preferences; they like quiet, still or slow-moving bodies of water such as shallow ponds, oxbow lakes, drainage ditches, borrow pits, marshes, swales, cypress swamps, and Carolina bays.[2][49][51][52] Generally, the chicken turtle prefers water with a maximum depth of around 70 cm (2.3 ft), but it is known to inhabit ponds up to 2 m (6.6 ft) deep. It rarely inhabits moving water such as streams or rivers, but may sometimes colonize quieter rivulets or pools in the riparian zone.[42] Furthermore, it strongly favors fresh water, avoiding brackish water wherever possible.[29]

The chicken turtle thrives in bodies of water with dense aquatic vegetation and a soft, muddy substrate. Often these are ephemeral or temporary wetlands that readily dry out during the summer or in periods of drought. Such habitats tend to be free both of fish, which would provide competition for food,[43] and potential predators such as alligators.[53] When drying occurs, chicken turtles will migrate to the land and burrow into the soil or hide under foliage to avoid dry weather. Although they are well adapted to living terrestrially, they rarely abandon their original habitat even during extended dry spells, and will relocate to the water once it returns.[54]

Although the chicken turtle does not generally inhabit islands, isolated groups are also known in the Outer Banks chain of barrier islands off North Carolina.[38] These maritime forest habitats are prone to drying out easily in the summer and can be affected by storms and sea spray, but research into one of these groups found no meaningful differences in longevity, growth rate or sex ratio between members of this population and their mainland counterparts.[55]

Behavior edit

 
Chicken turtle basking

The chicken turtle is diurnal; its main periods of activity, such as feeding and mating, take place in the morning and late afternoon, either side of the warmest hours of the day.[29][36] Like all reptiles, chicken turtles are cold-blooded and must regulate their body temperature. The main way they do this is through basking; they will spend many hours in the sun and can often be seen sitting on logs or tree stumps with their neck outstretched.[49] However, they tend to spend less time basking than their herbivorous relatives.[56] In order to be active, chicken turtles require an internal body temperature of around 25.5 °C (77.9 °F),[56] therefore they are generally more active on warm, cloudy days than on hot, sunny ones.[36] Like other turtles, the chicken turtle is extremely wary while basking and can be startled easily. Some have been known to bite and scratch in response to threats while others are more timid and retiring.[50][57] Males may display particularly hostile behavior towards each other.[56]

Unusually for an aquatic turtle, the chicken turtle is known to hibernate in winter throughout the northern part of its range.[2] It leaves the water in late September to find a suitable site for the winter, usually either in mud and vegetation around the edges of the ponds and swamps which it inhabits.[57] Alternatively, it may bury itself under fallen leaves in surrounding woodlands or in the mud at the bottom of a pond.[36][46] Hibernating chicken turtles remain out of the water for up to six months before becoming active again in the spring. They are able to spend long periods on land without feeding due to their large stores of body fat.[58] The first few days of activity following hibernation are generally dedicated to nesting and egg-laying by females, with males emerging slightly later around early April.[59] In the southernmost part of its range where winters are milder, the chicken turtle remains active all year round apart from on especially cool days.[56]

Chicken turtles are also frequently encountered on land during the summer months when the temporary wetlands they inhabit dry out. Males especially wander onto the land during this period and may travel great distances in search of alternative water,[29] whereas gravid females remain in the wetland as long as possible since extra water is needed for egg production.[60] Turtles unable to find a suitable aquatic habitat during particularly dry years may migrate to higher ground and burrow into the earth to undergo aestivation,[46] a period of dormancy similar to hibernation. Survivorship rates among small juveniles are lower during this period, possibly because they lack the fat and water reserves required to withstand long periods without feeding.[60] Individuals are known to return to the same terrestrial refugia from one year to the next.[60] In total, a chicken turtle may spend up to 285 days per year on the land.[61]

Life cycle edit

Mating and nesting edit

 
Adult chicken turtle laying eggs, Florida

The mating season of the chicken turtle can be estimated by the times of year in which male testicular volume is greatest, indicating maximum sperm production.[62] This period varies by location; in Florida, the testes are largest during the hottest months of summer, while in South Carolina and the slightly cooler climate of Missouri this occurs in the late spring and early summer months, roughly May through July.[49][56] In Texas, courtship may take place in the early spring (February to April) or fall (September to November).[63] The chicken turtle's mating ritual is initiated by the male, who swims at an angle towards the female turtle until he is facing her head-on. He then attracts the female's attention by making short, rapid swimming motions, gazing at her and vibrating his outstretched foreclaws against her face and neck.[53][56] Only if the female is receptive does copulation occur.[53] There is no evidence of forced insemination as sometimes seen in other related turtles.[64] Chicken turtle mating takes place in shallow waters,[36] and reproduction can be disrupted by prolonged periods of dry weather.[56]

Like mating, the timing of the nesting season depends on latitude. For example, in Florida nesting takes place continuously between mid-September and early March, with the possibility of an interruption if the winter weather is particularly cold.[56] Further north, nesting may begin earlier in the year (around the end of August) but is always paused during the coldest months before resuming in the spring.[65] In South Carolina and Arkansas, nesting and egg-laying may recommence in February,[56][50] while in Virginia, in the northernmost reaches of the chicken turtle's range, it may not start again until March.[36] This pattern of nesting in winter and hatching in spring is highly unusual; the chicken turtle is one of the only native North American turtles to nest at this time of year.[56][50] Several reasons have been suggested for why this behavior developed. One hypothesis is that it allows the hatchlings to emerge in the spring when there is a good supply of food available and less competition from hatchlings of other turtle species that appear later in the year. Furthermore, predators of turtle eggs may be less likely to hunt for them in the spring when there are generally fewer to be found.[65] Atypically among North American turtles, the female chicken turtle can retain fertilized, calcified eggs in her oviducts for several months after copulation, especially over the winter; these eggs will be laid in the spring once the nesting season resumes.[66]

The female nests on land, often in loose soil,[49][63] but sometimes in heavier ground.[67] She digs out a cylindrical cavity with a depth of around 10 cm (4 in) and a diameter at the opening of approximately 8 cm (3 in).[44] Nests are usually built close to the water,[50] although females are known to wander up to 280 m (306 yd) in search of suitable sites.[65] Once the nest is ready, the female deposits a clutch of between one and nineteen eggs.[nb 1] The eggs are white with a leathery or parchment-like shell,[38][50] and elliptical in shape, measuring approximately 28–41 mm (1.10–1.61 in) by 17–25 mm (0.67–0.98 in).[65] Egg mass varies considerably; a review of eight studies found reported averages between 9.0 g (0.3 oz) and 11.0 g (0.4 oz).[69] The mass appears to be positively correlated with female body size and eggs laid in fall are significantly heavier than those laid in spring.[70] Several minutes after laying, the female will fill in her nest, sweeping the dirt over the eggs with her hind legs until they are covered.[65] Chicken turtles commonly lay two clutches of eggs per year,[68] although in the uninterrupted nesting season of Florida, females have been known to produce as many as four.[38]

Growth and lifespan edit

The incubation period of chicken turtle eggs is again dependent on location and temperature. In the warmer climate of Florida, incubation takes 78–89 days in the wild, while in South Carolina it may last up to 152 days.[68] Under laboratory conditions, which aimed to recreate the very cool soil temperatures (as low as 4 °C (39 °F)) experienced further north, incubation was extended up to 194 days.[58] The egg's yolk contains a very high proportion of fats, on average 32.5% of dry matter, which help to nourish the hatchling during this long period in the nest.[70] Inside the egg, the embryo goes through a period of little to no development (diapause) in the late gastrula stage. It must experience a period of cool temperatures, around 15–22 °C (59–72 °F), before development proceeds when the temperature increases to 24 °C (75 °F). The temperature during this time strongly influences the sex of the hatchling; in one study, 100% of eggs kept at 25 °C (77 °F) produced male turtles, whereas at 30 °C (86 °F), 89% were female.[68]

When it is ready to emerge from the egg, the hatchling breaks through the shell using its egg tooth, a sharp, thornlike projection on its beak.[71] Chicken turtles born in the fall commonly remain in the nest over winter before emerging in the spring,[50] meaning that hatchlings from eggs laid in February or March may not leave the nest for over a year.[46] Very young hatchlings are almost circular, although as they grow their shell becomes less rounded and more elongated.[72] Young chicken turtles grow rapidly, approximately 25–44 mm (0.98–1.73 in) in the first year depending on conditions; in drought years growth may be slower.[68] The rate of growth is highly variable between regions and populations.[73] Growth continues until the turtle reaches sexual maturity, which occurs after approximately 2–3 years (or at a plastron length of 75–80 mm (2.95–3.15 in)) for males, and around 6–8 years (plastron length 141–155 mm (5.55–6.10 in)) for females.[2] The turtle continues to grow after reaching maturity, although considerably more slowly. Females that reach a length of around 180 mm (7.09 in) appear to become much less reproductively active; they may only lay eggs every second or third nesting season, or they may cease to ovulate altogether.[50]

The chicken turtle is one of the shortest-lived turtles in the world.[74][37] Wild chicken turtles have been recaptured up to 15 years after their first capture, with some reaching an estimated maximum age of 20–24 years.[68] A study by herpetologist Whit Gibbons suggested that less than 1% of chicken turtles live past the age of 15.[68] In captivity, they may only live for as little as 13 years.[1] This short lifespan means that the average female chicken turtle is active for fewer than ten breeding seasons.[58] Determining the age of a turtle becomes increasingly difficult as the animal ages; in the first few years of its life the turtle's shell may show visible growth rings (annuli) that can be used to approximate its age.[75] Annuli in the turtle's claws can sometimes be seen up to the age of around 14.[68]

Ecology edit

Diet edit

 
Dragonfly nymphs are a favorite food of the chicken turtle

Like many emydids, chicken turtles are almost completely carnivorous during the first year of their lives. However, they are unusual in preferring a carnivorous diet into adulthood.[76] It has been suggested that this explains the smaller local populations of D. reticularia compared to other related turtles due to competition with fish for food, especially insects.[77] In the wild they are known to prey on crayfish, invertebrates, tadpoles, vegetation and carrion,[78] including dead fish and other animals.[38] Carr described having seen a chicken turtle eating Nuphar (bonnet-lily) buds,[67] while captive adults have been observed feeding on gopher frog tadpoles,[79] lettuce, and canned fish.[45]

In a 1997 study of chicken turtle fecal matter collected during the summer months in South Carolina, dragonfly nymphs were the most commonly observed food, along with snails, spiders and insects such as backswimmers and water bugs. Only six out of forty-three specimens had ingested plant material.[77] Investigations into the digestive tract contents of chicken turtles in north-central Florida, where the eastern and Florida subspecies coexist, found similar results. Decapods (including crayfish and shrimp), dragonflies and beetles were the most frequently encountered foods; six out of twenty-five turtles had consumed trace amounts of plants or algae.[80] Research in Oklahoma found evidence that adults of the western subspecies follow a more omnivorous diet than their relatives. While crayfish and bugs were still present in the majority of fecal samples, 92.6 percent of samples also contained material or seeds of various plants, including the common rush and broadleaf cattail.[81]

The chicken turtle is an aquatic hunter. It waits in the water and strikes its long neck out quickly with its mouth open to catch live food,[82] relying on sight to detect its prey.[83] The length of the neck allows it to capture fast-moving prey such as fish and spiders, which would otherwise be able to escape.[38] Like Blanding's turtle, the chicken turtle uses a sucking motion when feeding;[76] any water taken in during the process is expelled before the food is swallowed whole.[82] The Florida chicken turtle is known to feed passively, swimming along with its long neck extended and foraging in clumps of vegetation.[76]

Predators edit

Information regarding predation of the chicken turtle is scarce, but it is presumed that common predators such as raccoons, skunks and snakes feed on eggs and juvenile turtles.[45][76] Fire ants are also known to attack nests and kill hatchlings of D. reticularia and other turtles.[84] Hibbitts and Hibbitts suggest humans and alligators to be the main predators of the western subspecies,[63] while a study in Florida found evidence of red-shouldered hawks preying on various turtles including the Florida chicken turtle.[85] Otters, herons and snapping turtles are also listed as possible predators.[48][76][84]

The meat of the chicken turtle is considered palatable and was once widely sold at markets throughout the southern United States for use in turtle soup;[36][67] it is thought that the vernacular name is a reference to the flavor of its meat.[49] It is still sometimes eaten today in rural areas, although this is uncommon.[45] Consumption by humans is no longer considered to be a significant threat to the chicken turtle population.[86]

Parasites edit

Various parasites have been identified during examinations of chicken turtle specimens. In 1968, Fain described a new species of cheyletoid mite, Caminacarus deirochelys, found in the rectum of a chicken turtle collected in Englewood, Florida, thirty years earlier.[87] The trematode Neopolystoma orbiculare has been reported from the bladder of D. reticularia,[88] while Telorchis corti is known to parasitize chicken turtles and various other emydids.[89] A 2016 study of two chicken turtle specimens captured in Alabama identified a previously unknown species of blood fluke, Spirorchis collinsi.[90]

Conservation edit

 
Chicken turtle in Virginia, where only around 30 adults are thought to remain

The chicken turtle population as a whole is currently considered secure and is thought to consist of at least 100,000 adults.[2] Local populations are often small but stable, however the species is designated by NatureServe as S1 (critically imperiled) in Virginia and Missouri and S2 (imperiled) in Arkansas, Louisiana, North Carolina and Oklahoma.[2] The chicken turtle does not appear on the IUCN's Red List of Threatened Species, although the Tortoise and Freshwater Turtle Specialist Group's own provisional list considers it Near Threatened.[18] At the state level, the chicken turtle is protected by various local laws. In Virginia, where only around 30 adults are thought to remain, it has been listed as "vulnerable" since 1987.[48] It is also considered at risk by the Alabama Natural Heritage Program; local regulations state that only two turtles may be kept and these must be for personal use (e.g. as pets).[82] Along with other native reptiles, removal of chicken turtles from their natural habitat is regulated in several states throughout its range including Texas, Georgia and North Carolina.[86] The chicken turtle is subject to a ban on commercial taking in Arkansas,[91] where it is "extremely rare".[58] In Missouri, where until 1995 no sightings had been recorded for at least 33 years,[nb 2] it is listed as an endangered species, making hunting illegal.[49]

Habitat loss appears to be the most significant threat to the stability of chicken turtle populations.[93][86] Human activity is one cause of this; the turtle's preferred wetland habitats are often converted for agriculture, such as rice farming, or building developments. In Missouri and Arkansas in particular, the destruction of swampland and bottomland hardwood forests is a direct threat to the chicken turtle.[49][58] Man-made obstacles such as fences and road barriers can also lead to populations becoming isolated.[2] Since it prefers to live in small, shallow bodies of water that can easily dry out during the hotter months, the chicken turtle is also susceptible to the loss of upland habitats surrounding wetlands to which it migrates during periods of drought.[82] Migration also leads to turtles, especially females in search of suitable nesting sites, walking onto roads where they are killed by traffic.[63] Fire is a further threat; wildfires are becoming increasingly common and while controlled burns can help to protect wetland habitats by decreasing the risk of wildfire, chicken turtles that are overwintering on land or have been forced onto the land during drier months can be caught up in them.[82]

Several locations inhabited by chicken turtles are already under protection, having been designated as wildlife reserves or conservation areas. However, further preservation of wetlands, especially temporary ones, would be beneficial in ensuring the continued stability of the population.[86] In particular, the protections currently in place rarely include the surrounding areas of land that the chicken turtle inhabits for much of the year.[82] Scientists in Oklahoma have developed quantitative polymerase chain reaction assay tests to enable the presence of four uncommon or vulnerable reptiles, including the chicken turtle, to be identified through environmental DNA.[94]

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The number of eggs per clutch is given by different sources as 5–12,[50] 5–15,[44] 1–12 in South Carolina and 2–19 in Florida.[68] The size of the clutch appears to increase with the turtle's plastron length.[68]
  2. ^ The Amphibians and Reptiles of Arkansas states that the previous sighting occurred in 1957.[92] Buhlmann, Gibbons and Jackson give a later date of 1962.[58]

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b c Lovich & Gibbons 2021, p. 82.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h "Deirochelys reticularia". explorer.natureserve.org. NatureServe. Retrieved 2022-04-24.
  3. ^ a b c d e Ernst & Barbour 1972, p. 174.
  4. ^ Buhlmann, Gibbons & Jackson 2008, p. 014.1.
  5. ^ a b Fritz, Uwe; Havaš, Peter (2007). "Checklist of Chelonians of the World" (PDF). Vertebrate Zoology. 57 (2): 179–180. doi:10.3897/vz.57.e30895. Retrieved 2022-04-24.
  6. ^ Jackson 1978, p. 38.
  7. ^ a b Sonnini, C. S.; Latreille, P. A. (1801). Histoire naturelle des reptiles, avec figures dessinées d'apres nature. Vol. 1. Paris: Imprimerie Crapelet. pp. 124–127.
  8. ^ Daudin, F. M. (1801). Histoire naturelle, générale et particulière, des reptiles. Vol. 2. Paris: L'Imprimerie de F. Dufart. pp. 144–147.
  9. ^ Schwartz 1956, p. 461.
  10. ^ a b c d e Buhlmann, Gibbons & Jackson 2008, p. 014.2.
  11. ^ Agassiz 1857, p. 252.
  12. ^ Agassiz 1857, p. 441.
  13. ^ Harper, Francis (1940). "Some Works of Bartram, Daudin, Latreille, and Sonnini, and Their Bearing Upon North American Herpetological Nomenclature". Am. Midl. Nat. 23 (3). The University of Notre Dame: 710–711. doi:10.2307/2420453. JSTOR 2420453.
  14. ^ Jackson 1978, p. 37.
  15. ^ Franklin, Carl J. (2007). Turtles. St Paul, Minnesota: Voyageur Press. p. 96. ISBN 978-0-78582-775-7.
  16. ^ "Taxonomy chapter for Turtle, eastern chicken (030064)". BOVA booklet. Virginia Fish and Wildlife Information Service. Retrieved 2022-04-24.
  17. ^ Schwartz 1956, p. 462.
  18. ^ a b c d Rhodin et al. 2021, p. 135.
  19. ^ a b Schwartz 1956, p. 468.
  20. ^ a b c d Guyer, Bailey & Mount 2015, p. 161.
  21. ^ a b c d e f Zug & Schwartz 1971, p. 107.2.
  22. ^ a b Rhodin et al. 2021, p. 136.
  23. ^ Ernst & Barbour 1972, p. 330.
  24. ^ Buhlmann, Tuberville & Gibbons 2008, p. 85.
  25. ^ Ernst & Barbour 1972, p. 175.
  26. ^ Ernst & Barbour 1972, p. 293.
  27. ^ Schwartz 1956, p. 488.
  28. ^ a b c Schwartz 1956, p. 498.
  29. ^ a b c d Ernst & Lovich 2009, p. 224.
  30. ^ Guyer, Bailey & Mount 2015, p. 160.
  31. ^ Jackson 1978, p. 47.
  32. ^ a b c Ernst & Lovich 2009, p. 223.
  33. ^ a b c d Carr 1952, p. 316.
  34. ^ Jackson 1978, p. 43.
  35. ^ Jackson 1978, p. 45.
  36. ^ a b c d e f g h i j "Life History chapter for Turtle, eastern chicken (030064)". BOVA booklet. Virginia Fish and Wildlife Information Service. Retrieved 2022-04-26.
  37. ^ a b Lovich & Gibbons 2021, p. 83.
  38. ^ a b c d e f Buhlmann, Gibbons & Jackson 2008, p. 014.3.
  39. ^ a b Hibbitts & Hibbitts 2016, p. 160.
  40. ^ a b Schwartz 1956, p. 464.
  41. ^ Stephens, Patrick R.; Wiens, John J. (2003). "Ecological diversification and phylogeny of emydid turtles". Biological Journal of the Linnean Society. 79 (4): 577–610. doi:10.1046/j.1095-8312.2003.00211.x.
  42. ^ a b c Carr 1952, p. 318.
  43. ^ a b Ernst & Lovich 2009, p. 222.
  44. ^ a b c Ernst & Barbour 1972, p. 177.
  45. ^ a b c d e Ernst & Barbour 1972, p. 178.
  46. ^ a b c d Connell, Patia M. "Species Profile: Chicken Turtle (Deirochelys reticularia)". srelherp.uga.edu. Savannah River Ecology Laboratory, University of Georgia. Retrieved 2022-04-28.
  47. ^ Zug & Schwartz 1971, p. 107.1.
  48. ^ a b c "Status chapter for Turtle, eastern chicken (030064)". BOVA booklet. Virginia Fish and Wildlife Information Service. Retrieved 2022-04-24.
  49. ^ a b c d e f g h "Western Chicken Turtle". mdc.mo.gov. Missouri Department of Conservation. Retrieved 2022-04-27.
  50. ^ a b c d e f g h i Trauth, Robison & Plummer 2004, p. 221.
  51. ^ Gibbons 1969, p. 670.
  52. ^ Dinkelacker, S. A. (2014). "Demographic and Reproductive Traits of Western Chicken Turtles, Deirochelys reticularia miaria in central Arkansas". Journal of Herpetology.
  53. ^ a b c Guyer, Bailey & Mount 2015, p. 162.
  54. ^ Gibbons 1969, p. 676.
  55. ^ Hanscom, Ryan J.; Dinkelacker, Stephen A.; McCall, Aaron J.; Parlin, Adam F. (2020). "Demographic traits of freshwater turtles in a maritime forest habitat". Herpetologica. 76 (1): 12–21. doi:10.1655/Herpetologica-D-19-00037. S2CID 212114331.
  56. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Ernst & Lovich 2009, p. 226.
  57. ^ a b Ernst & Barbour 1972, p. 176.
  58. ^ a b c d e f Buhlmann, Gibbons & Jackson 2008, p. 014.4.
  59. ^ Gibbons 1969, p. 675.
  60. ^ a b c Buhlmann, Kurt A.; Congdon, Justin D.; Gibbons, J. Whitfield; Greene, Judith L. (2009). "Ecology of chicken turtles (Deirochelys reticularia) in a seasonal wetland ecosystem: exploiting resource and refuge environment". Herpetologica. 65 (1): 39–53. doi:10.1655/08-028R1.1. JSTOR 27669742. S2CID 85392895.
  61. ^ Ernst & Lovich 2009, p. 225.
  62. ^ Gibbons 1969, p. 674.
  63. ^ a b c d Hibbitts & Hibbitts 2016, p. 162.
  64. ^ Berry, James F.; Shine, Richard (1980). "Sexual Size Dimorphism and Sexual Selection in Turtles (Order Testudines)". Oecologia. 44 (2): 185–191. Bibcode:1980Oecol..44..185B. doi:10.1007/BF00572678. JSTOR 4216009. PMID 28310555. S2CID 2456783.
  65. ^ a b c d e Ernst & Lovich 2009, p. 227.
  66. ^ Buhlmann, Kurt A.; Lynch, Tracy K.; Gibbons, J. Whitfield; Greene, Judith L. (1995). "Prolonged egg retention in the turtle Deirochelys reticularia in South Carolina". Herpetologica. 51 (4): 457–462. JSTOR 3892771.
  67. ^ a b c Carr 1952, p. 319.
  68. ^ a b c d e f g h i Ernst & Lovich 2009, p. 229.
  69. ^ Dinkelacker, Stephen A.; Hilzinger, Nathanael L. (2014). "Demographic and reproductive traits of Western Chicken Turtles, Deirochelys reticularia miaria, in Central Arkansas". Journal of Herpetology. 48 (4): 439–444. doi:10.1670/12-227. JSTOR 43287470. S2CID 86489790.
  70. ^ a b Congdon, Justin D.; Gibbons, J. Whitfield; Greene, Judith L. (1983). "Parental investment in the Chicken Turtle (Deirochelys reticularia)". Ecology. 64 (3): 419–425. Bibcode:1983Ecol...64..419C. doi:10.2307/1939959. JSTOR 1939959.
  71. ^ Carr 1952, p. 317.
  72. ^ Schwartz 1956, p. 472.
  73. ^ Gibbons 1969, p. 372.
  74. ^ Congdon, J.D. (2022). "Comparing Life Histories of the Shortest-Lived Turtle Known (Chicken Turtles, Dierochelys reticularia) with Long-Lived Blanding's Turtles (Emydoidea blandingii)". Chelonian Conservation and Biology.
  75. ^ Gibbons 1969, p. 371.
  76. ^ a b c d e Ernst & Lovich 2009, p. 231.
  77. ^ a b Demuth, Jeffrey P.; Buhlmann, Kurt A. (1997). "Diet of the Turtle Deirochelys reticularia on the Savannah River Site, South Carolina". Journal of Herpetology. 31 (3): 450–453. doi:10.2307/1565680. JSTOR 1565680.
  78. ^ Hibbitts & Hibbitts 2016, p. 161.
  79. ^ Redmer, Michael; Parris, Matthew J. (2005). "Family Ranidae". In Rannoo, Michael (ed.). Amphibian Declines. Berkeley, California: University of California Press. p. 538. doi:10.1525/9780520929432. ISBN 0-520-23592-4.
  80. ^ Jackson, Dale R. (1996). "Meat on the Move: Diet of a Predatory Turtle, Deirochelys reticularia (Testudines : Emydidae)" (PDF). Chelonian Conservation and Biology. 2 (1): 105–108.
  81. ^ McKnight, Donald T.; Jones, Anne C.; Ligon, Day B. (2015). "The Omnivorous Diet of the Western Chicken Turtle (Deirochelys reticularia miaria)". Copeia. 103 (2): 322–328. doi:10.1643/CH-14-072. S2CID 86844313.
  82. ^ a b c d e f Guyer, Bailey & Mount 2015, p. 163.
  83. ^ Buhlmann, Tuberville & Gibbons 2008, p. 87.
  84. ^ a b Buhlmann, Tuberville & Gibbons 2008, p. 88.
  85. ^ Walsh, Timothy J.; Heinrich, George L. (2015). "Red-shouldered hawk (Buteo lineatus) predation of turtles in central Florida". Florida Field Naturalist. 43 (2): 79–85.
  86. ^ a b c d Buhlmann, Gibbons & Jackson 2008, p. 014.5.
  87. ^ Fain, Alex (1968). "Notes sur les Acariens de la famille Cloacaridae, Camin et al., parasites du cloaque et des tissus profonds des tortues (Cheyletoidea: Trombidiformes)" (PDF). Bulletin de l'Institut Royal des Sciences Naturelles de Belgique. 44 (15): 1–33.
  88. ^ Loftin, Horace (1960). "An annotated check-list of trematodes and cestodes and their vertebrate hosts from northwest Florida". Quarterly Journal of the Florida Academy of Sciences. 23 (4): 302–314. JSTOR 24314969.
  89. ^ Wharton, G. W. (1940). "The genera Telorchis, Protenes, and Auridistomum (Trematoda: Reniferidae)". The Journal of Parasitology. 26 (6): 497–518. doi:10.2307/3272252. JSTOR 3272252.
  90. ^ Roberts, Jackson R.; Orélis-Ribeiro, Raphael; Halanych, Kenneth M.; Arias, Cova R.; Bullard, Stephen A. (2016). "A new species of Spirorchis MacCallum, 1918 (Digenea: Schistosomatoidea) and Spirorchis cf. scripta from chicken turtle, Deirochelys reticularia (Emydidae), with an emendation and molecular phylogeny of Spirorchis". Folia Parasitologica. 63: 041. doi:10.14411/fp.2016.041. PMID 28003567.
  91. ^ Newell Peacock, Leslie (2018-07-12). "Game and Fish ponders banning turtle harvest". arktimes.com. Arkansas Times. Retrieved 2022-04-27.
  92. ^ Trauth, Robison & Plummer 2004, p. 222.
  93. ^ Ernst & Lovich 2009, p. 232.
  94. ^ Siler, Cameron D.; Freitas, Elyse S.; Yuri, Tamaki; Souza, Lara; Watters, Jessa L. (2020). "Development and validation of four environmental DNA assays for species of conservation concern in the South-Central United States". Conservation Genetics Resources. 13: 35–40. doi:10.1007/s12686-020-01167-3. S2CID 224943576.

Bibliography edit

  • Agassiz, Louis (1857). Contributions to the natural history of the United States of America. Vol. 1. Boston, Massachusetts: Little, Brown and Company. doi:10.5962/bhl.title.12644. Retrieved 2022-02-24.
  • Buhlmann, Kurt A.; Gibbons, J. Whitfield; Jackson, Dale R. (2008). "Deirochelys reticularia (Latreille 1801) – Chicken Turtle" (PDF). Chelonian Research Monographs. 5. Lunenburg, Massachusetts: Chelonian Research Foundation: 014.1–014.6. doi:10.3854/crm.5.014.reticularia.v1.2008. ISSN 1088-7105. Retrieved 2022-04-24.
  • Buhlmann, Kurt; Tuberville, Tracey; Gibbons, Whit (2008). "Chicken Turtle". Turtles of the Southeast. Athens, Georgia: University of Georgia Press. pp. 84–88. ISBN 978-0-8203-2902-4. Retrieved 2022-05-10.
  • Carr, Archie F. (1952). "Genus Deirochelys: The Chicken Turtles". Handbook of Turtles: The Turtles of the United States, Canada, and Baja California (paperback ed.). Ithaca, New York: Cornell University Press. pp. 316–319. doi:10.7591/9781501722479-007. ISBN 0-8014-8254-2. S2CID 239377136.
  • Ernst, Carl H.; Barbour, Roger William (1972). "Deirochelys reticularia". Turtles of the United States. Lexington, Kentucky: The University Press of Kentucky. pp. 174–178. ISBN 0-8131-1272-9. Retrieved 2022-04-24.
  • Ernst, Carl H.; Lovich, Jeffrey E. (2009). "Chicken Turtles". Turtles of the United States and Canada. Baltimore, Maryland: Johns Hopkins University Press. pp. 222–232. ISBN 978-0-8018-9121-2. Retrieved 2022-02-24.
  • Gibbons, J. Whitfield (1969). "Ecology and Population Dynamics of the Chicken Turtle, Deirochelys reticularia". Copeia. 1969 (4). American Society of Ichthyologists and Herpetologists: 669–676. doi:10.2307/1441791. JSTOR 1441791.
  • Guyer, Craig; Bailey, Mark A.; Mount, Robert L. (2015). "Chicken Turtles". Turtles of Alabama. Tuscaloosa, Alabama: University of Alabama Press. pp. 160–163. ISBN 978-0-8173-5806-8. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  • Hibbitts, Troy D.; Hibbitts, Terry L. (2016). "Chicken Turtle". Texas Turtles & Crocodilians: A Field Guide. Austin, Texas: University of Texas Press. pp. 159–162. doi:10.7560/307779-005. ISBN 978-1-4773-0777-9. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  • Jackson, Dale R. (1978). "Evolution and fossil record of the chicken turtle Deirochelys, with a re-evaluation of the genus". Tulane Studies in Zoology and Botany. 20. New Orleans, Louisiana: Tulane University: 35–56. Retrieved 2022-04-24.
  • Lovich, Jeffrey E.; Gibbons, Whit (2021). "Chicken Turtles". Turtles of the World. Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press. pp. 82–83. doi:10.1515/9780691229034. ISBN 978-1-4773-0777-9. S2CID 245884540.
  • Rhodin, A. G. J.; Iverson, J. B.; Bour, R.; Fritz, U.; Georges, A.; Shaffer, H. B.; Van Dijk, P. P. (2021). "Turtles of the World: Annotated Checklist and Atlas of Taxonomy, Synonymy, Distribution, and Conservation Status (9th Ed.)" (PDF). Chelonian Research Monographs. 8. Lunenburg, Massachusetts: Chelonian Research Foundation: 1–472. doi:10.3854/crm.8.checklist.atlas.v9.2021. ISBN 9780991036837. ISSN 1088-7105. S2CID 244279960. Retrieved 2022-04-25.
  • Schwartz, Albert (1956). "Geographic variation in the chicken turtle". Fieldiana: Zoology. 34 (41). Chicago, Illinois: Chicago Natural History Museum: 461–503. Retrieved 2022-04-24.
  • Trauth, Stanley E.; Robison, Henry W.; Plummer, Michael V. (2004). "Western Chicken Turtle—Deirochelys reticularia miaria Schwartz". The Amphibians and Reptiles of Arkansas. Fayetteville, Arkansas: The University of Arkansas Press. pp. 220–222. ISBN 1-55728-737-6. Retrieved 2022-04-27.
  • Zug, George R.; Schwartz, Albert (1971). "Deirochelys, D. reticularia" (PDF). Catalogue of American Amphibians and Reptiles: 107.1–107.3. doi:10.15781/T2ST7F22C. Retrieved 2022-04-26.

chicken, turtle, chicken, turtle, deirochelys, reticularia, turtle, native, southeastern, united, states, only, extant, member, genus, deirochelys, member, freshwater, marsh, turtle, family, emydidae, chicken, turtle, scientific, name, refers, extremely, long,. The chicken turtle Deirochelys reticularia is a turtle native to the southeastern United States It is the only extant member of the genus Deirochelys and is a member of the freshwater marsh turtle family Emydidae The chicken turtle s scientific name refers to its extremely long neck and distinctive net like pattern on its upper shell There are three regionally distinct subspecies eastern western and Florida which are thought to have evolved when populations became separated during periods of glaciation These subspecies can be distinguished by their appearance the western chicken turtle displays dark markings along the seams of its plastron lower shell while the plastron of the Florida subspecies is a bright yellow or orange color Fossil records show that the chicken turtle has been present in the region for up to five million years Chicken turtleTemporal range 5 0 Ma PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg N Pliocene recent 1 Chicken turtle on land Conservation status Secure NatureServe 2 Scientific classification Domain Eukaryota Kingdom Animalia Phylum Chordata Class Reptilia Order Testudines Suborder Cryptodira Superfamily Testudinoidea Family Emydidae Subfamily Deirochelyinae Genus Deirochelys Species D reticularia Binomial name Deirochelys reticularia Latreille 1801 Subspecies 3 D r chrysea Schwartz 1956D r miaria Schwartz 1956D r reticularia Latreille 1801 Synonyms Species synonymy 4 5 6 Testudo reticulariaLatreille 1801 Testudo reticulataDaudin 1801 Emys reticulariaSchweigger 1814 Emys reticulataSay 1824 Terrapene reticulataBonaparte 1831 Clemmys reticulataFitzinger 1835 Deirochelys reticulataAgassiz 1857 Clemmys reticulariaStrauch 1862 Chrysemys reticulataCope 1875 Dirochelys reticulariaBaur 1890 Hirochelys reticulataBeyer 1900 Chicken turtles inhabit shallow still or slow moving bodies of water with plenty of vegetation and a muddy substrate They are not found in rivers or deeper lakes that may be home to predators such as alligators and large fish The chicken turtle is predominantly carnivorous and feeds mostly on invertebrates such as crayfish dragonflies and spiders but is also known to eat tadpoles carrion and occasionally plant material It is an active hunter and its long neck allows it to catch fast moving prey Although feeding and mating take place in aquatic environments the chicken turtle is very well adapted to living on land and may spend more than half the year out of the water Like many reptiles it spends much of the day basking in the sun to regulate its body temperature but unlike most other aquatic turtles it hibernates over the winter months except in the warmer southernmost reaches of its range The chicken turtle is relatively small compared to other related turtles with males measuring up to around 16 5 cm 6 5 in and females around 26 0 cm 10 2 in It is also one of the world s shortest lived turtles reaching a maximum age of 20 24 years There are thought to be around 100 000 adult chicken turtles in the wild Although the population as a whole is considered secure its status in some areas is less certain and several states have listed it as threatened or introduced regulations to manage hunting or taking The word chicken in the turtle s vernacular name is apparently a reference to the taste of its meat which was once popular in turtle soup and commonly sold in southern markets Contents 1 Taxonomy and evolution 1 1 Subspecies 1 2 Fossil record 2 Description 3 Distribution 3 1 Range 3 1 1 Eastern chicken turtle 3 1 2 Florida chicken turtle 3 1 3 Western chicken turtle 3 2 Habitat 4 Behavior 5 Life cycle 5 1 Mating and nesting 5 2 Growth and lifespan 6 Ecology 6 1 Diet 6 2 Predators 6 3 Parasites 7 Conservation 8 References 8 1 Notes 8 2 Citations 8 3 BibliographyTaxonomy and evolution edit nbsp Drawing accompanying Latreille s 1801 description of Testudo reticularia The species was first described in 1801 independently by two French zoologists as Testudo reticularia by Pierre Andre Latreille 7 and as Testudo reticulata by Francois Marie Daudin 8 Both descriptions were based on drawings and a single specimen collected by Louis Augustin Guillaume Bosc in the vicinity of Charleston South Carolina some years previously 9 Subsequent studies placed the chicken turtle into various related genera Emys Clemmys and Terrapene 5 10 before Louis Agassiz assigned it to the current genus in 1857 11 He distinguished D reticularia from other North American members of the family Emydidae by the length of its neck and from the Australian Chelodina by the articulation of the neck vertebrae 12 In his 1940 comparison of Latreille and Daudin s original descriptions naturalist Francis Harper determined that Latreille s had been published first hence the currently accepted specific name 13 The chicken turtle is the only extant species in the genus Deirochelys 1 14 Its parent family is Emydidae the freshwater marsh turtles which are found on every continent except Australia and Antarctica 15 The name of the genus is derived from the Ancient Greek words for neck deirḗ and tortoise khelus a reference to the species particularly long neck The species name reticularia comes from the Latin for net like or reticulated reticulatus probably alluding to the turtle s patterned carapace top shell 16 Subspecies edit There are three distinct subspecies of chicken turtle as described by Albert Schwartz in 1956 from a study of 325 specimens 10 17 The eastern chicken turtle D r reticularia is the turtle originally described by Latreille in 1801 It is the largest of the chicken turtles with males measuring up to 16 5 cm 6 5 in and females up to 26 0 cm 10 2 in 18 It is distinguished from the other subspecies by the coloring of its carapace which is olive to brown with a yellow rim 3 The plastron lower shell sometimes features a spot or indistinct splotch of color 19 Its outstretched neck is especially long sometimes as long as the carapace itself 20 The Florida chicken turtle D r chrysea has the most distinctively patterned carapace of all the chicken turtles featuring bold broad yellow orange reticulation 3 The shell is cuneiform wedge shaped especially so in males and juvenile turtles 21 and measures up to 16 5 cm 6 5 in for males and 25 0 cm 9 8 in for females 22 The subspecies name chrysea is taken from the Latin for golden one due to the bright yellow or orange color of its plastron 23 21 The western chicken turtle D r miaria is the smallest of the three subspecies males have a maximum carapace length of 16 1 cm 6 3 in and females 21 0 cm 8 3 in 22 The stripes on its head and neck are lighter in color cream or pale yellow compared to other chicken turtles 24 and its plastron features a dark pattern along the seams 25 The subspecies epithet miaria derives from the Greek for stained referring to this patterning 26 Its carapace is oval in shape and flatter than that of the other subspecies 27 nbsp The plastron of the eastern chicken turtle D r reticularia sometimes features an indistinct splotch of color Schwartz considered that D r reticularia is probably most reminiscent of the ancestors of Deirochelys and that the other two subspecies most likely developed from it 28 The western chicken turtle is the most divergent of the three subspecies suggesting a longer period of separation possibly after populations were cut off from one another during a period of glaciation Similarly D r chrysea developed from a later population separation a common phenomenon on the geographically diverse Florida peninsula 28 Studies of the chicken turtle s mitochondrial DNA support this theory of earlier divergence of the western subspecies from the two eastern ones 29 It is thought that the Mississippi River prevents intergradation the presence of populations sharing characteristics of two subspecies between D r miaria and D r reticularia since the chicken turtle does not generally inhabit rivers or moving water 28 Intergrades of the eastern and Florida chicken turtles are known however with several specimens having been collected in north central Florida 19 Fossil record edit Ancestors of the chicken turtle and related turtles of the genus Chrysemys may have been present in North America for up to 40 million years 30 Writing in 1978 Dale Jackson considered D reticularia to have one of the most complete evolutionary records of any Recent turtle 31 Fossils have been found throughout its current range examples dating from the Pliocene roughly 5 33 to 2 58 million years ago to the sub Recent prior to the start of the Holocene or Recent epoch around 11 700 years ago have been discovered in Florida 32 33 in addition to fossils in Pleistocene deposits in South Carolina 32 A fossil found in Alachua County Florida dating from the middle Pliocene was originally thought to belong to D reticularia but was later identified by Jackson as an extinct relative D carri 34 This species was somewhat larger than its modern relative and its shell roughly twice as thick 35 Other fossil fragments from the Hemingfordian 20 6 to 16 3 million years ago are considered to belong to even earlier more primitive members of the genus 32 Description edit nbsp Large adult chicken turtle with the reticulated pattern on the carapace clearly visible The chicken turtle resembles the painted turtle Chrysemys picta and some species of cooter genus Pseudemys in appearance but has an unusually long neck that is close to the length of its shell 36 It often also has black blotches on the underside of the bridge the part of the shell connecting the carapace and plastron which are not present in these other species 20 The carapace of the chicken turtle is elongated and pear shaped with the rear half noticeably wider than the front 37 38 It ranges from dark green to brown in color 39 and features a distinctive yellowish net like pattern across its entire upper surface 40 The scutes of the upper shell have a ridged or wrinkled texture and are rough to the touch 3 Beneath its shell the chicken turtle has particularly slender ribs supposedly developed to accommodate its long muscular neck 33 Although the chicken turtle shares morphological features with Blanding s turtle Emydoidea blandingii such as these elongated ribs and the shape of the skull DNA analysis has shown they are not closely related 41 Descriptions of the chicken turtle disagree on the base color of its skin but it is generally reported to be darker than the carapace varying from olive to brown to black 10 20 40 One of the distinguishing features of D reticularia is a broad yellow stripe on the forelegs 36 The skin of the neck and head also has light stripes although narrower while the tail and rear legs show vertical yellow markings 42 The head itself is elongated with a somewhat pointed snout but no other distinguishing features 43 and the digits of the feet are webbed and tipped with claws 7 Compared to other turtles the chicken turtle is small to medium in size Adults vary in length from around 10 25 cm 4 10 in 3 with an average length of around 13 cm 5 in 33 The width of the carapace is roughly 65 percent of its length 33 Mature chicken turtles exhibit some degree of sexual dimorphism the females are larger and heavier than males although the males have longer thicker tails 10 36 Unlike the painted turtle there is no difference between the sexes in terms of the length of the foreclaws 10 Chicken turtle hatchlings measure approximately 28 32 mm 1 1 1 3 in and weigh around 8 9 g 0 28 0 32 oz 36 The shell is much rounder than the adults 44 and the shell and skin are considerably brighter in color 45 with a greater number of light stripes 42 The young of the western chicken turtle hatches with the distinctive dark markings on its plastron already present 45 Distribution editRange edit The chicken turtle is found throughout the southeastern United States its range extends from the Atlantic coastal plain and states such as North Carolina South Carolina Georgia and Florida westward through the Gulf plain towards the Mississippi River It tends to remain in coastal areas and is largely absent from the Piedmont plateau and more mountainous regions in the north of these states 46 West of the river its territory reaches as far north as Missouri and as far west as Oklahoma and central Texas 47 Across its range the chicken turtle may inhabit many hundreds or possibly thousands of wetland sites although populations in any particular location are generally small 2 Eastern chicken turtle edit nbsp Cypress swamp in First Landing State Park Virginia it is unclear whether chicken turtles are still present here The eastern chicken turtle is the most widespread of the three subspecies with specimens known from eight states The main bulk of its territory begins on the eastern banks of the Mississippi River in southeast Louisiana and extends eastward along the coastal plain of the Gulf of Mexico Apart from the coastal region in the south of the state it is not present in most of Mississippi save for a small population in the drainage basin of the Tombigbee River 18 In Alabama it is again commonly found throughout the coastal plain in the southern half of the state It is also present further north in the Ridge and Valley region of the Appalachian mountain range although less common 20 Through Georgia South Carolina and North Carolina the eastern chicken turtle is again widely found throughout the coastal regions although specimens have been recorded further inland in North Carolina 18 It is abundant in northern Florida especially in the Panhandle region where it is the only subspecies present Its range begins to overlap with the Florida chicken turtle towards the north central part of the state with intergrades having been identified in Taylor Levy Gilchrist and Clay counties 21 The eastern chicken turtle is also present in Virginia although it is very rare there A small colony was known to inhabit First Landing State Park in Virginia but several studies have only managed to locate one adult female and it is thought this population may be extirpated Around 40 mi 64 km to the west a small group of around 30 adults is present in Isle of Wight County 48 Neither of these locations is contiguous with the rest of the turtle s range it is unclear whether these populations are relics of a native and formerly more widespread group or whether they were introduced to the area 21 Florida chicken turtle edit As its name suggests the Florida chicken turtle is native to Florida and is only found within the state It is relatively widespread throughout the central and southern portions of the state although it is absent from the Florida Keys 21 Western chicken turtle edit The western chicken turtle s range is generally restricted to locations west of the Mississippi River although specimens have been found on the river s eastern banks in northwest Mississippi state 21 Its range extends from the coastal plain of the Gulf of Mexico in Texas and Louisiana northward into the south and east of Oklahoma and through Arkansas towards Missouri It may once have been common in the swampland of Missouri s Bootheel region but is now only found in a few small groups in the extreme southeast of the state 49 Its territory is also decreasing in Arkansas diffuse groups are now found only in the northern reaches of the Gulf coastal plain in the south of the state as well as some regions of the Arkansas River Valley 50 The western chicken turtle is reasonably uncommon in Texas but its population there is secure It inhabits the drainage basins of several rivers in the eastern half of the state such as the Sabine and the Neches 39 Habitat edit Chicken turtles are semiaquatic equally comfortable in wetland habitats and on land All three subspecies have similar preferences they like quiet still or slow moving bodies of water such as shallow ponds oxbow lakes drainage ditches borrow pits marshes swales cypress swamps and Carolina bays 2 49 51 52 Generally the chicken turtle prefers water with a maximum depth of around 70 cm 2 3 ft but it is known to inhabit ponds up to 2 m 6 6 ft deep It rarely inhabits moving water such as streams or rivers but may sometimes colonize quieter rivulets or pools in the riparian zone 42 Furthermore it strongly favors fresh water avoiding brackish water wherever possible 29 The chicken turtle thrives in bodies of water with dense aquatic vegetation and a soft muddy substrate Often these are ephemeral or temporary wetlands that readily dry out during the summer or in periods of drought Such habitats tend to be free both of fish which would provide competition for food 43 and potential predators such as alligators 53 When drying occurs chicken turtles will migrate to the land and burrow into the soil or hide under foliage to avoid dry weather Although they are well adapted to living terrestrially they rarely abandon their original habitat even during extended dry spells and will relocate to the water once it returns 54 Although the chicken turtle does not generally inhabit islands isolated groups are also known in the Outer Banks chain of barrier islands off North Carolina 38 These maritime forest habitats are prone to drying out easily in the summer and can be affected by storms and sea spray but research into one of these groups found no meaningful differences in longevity growth rate or sex ratio between members of this population and their mainland counterparts 55 Behavior edit nbsp Chicken turtle basking The chicken turtle is diurnal its main periods of activity such as feeding and mating take place in the morning and late afternoon either side of the warmest hours of the day 29 36 Like all reptiles chicken turtles are cold blooded and must regulate their body temperature The main way they do this is through basking they will spend many hours in the sun and can often be seen sitting on logs or tree stumps with their neck outstretched 49 However they tend to spend less time basking than their herbivorous relatives 56 In order to be active chicken turtles require an internal body temperature of around 25 5 C 77 9 F 56 therefore they are generally more active on warm cloudy days than on hot sunny ones 36 Like other turtles the chicken turtle is extremely wary while basking and can be startled easily Some have been known to bite and scratch in response to threats while others are more timid and retiring 50 57 Males may display particularly hostile behavior towards each other 56 Unusually for an aquatic turtle the chicken turtle is known to hibernate in winter throughout the northern part of its range 2 It leaves the water in late September to find a suitable site for the winter usually either in mud and vegetation around the edges of the ponds and swamps which it inhabits 57 Alternatively it may bury itself under fallen leaves in surrounding woodlands or in the mud at the bottom of a pond 36 46 Hibernating chicken turtles remain out of the water for up to six months before becoming active again in the spring They are able to spend long periods on land without feeding due to their large stores of body fat 58 The first few days of activity following hibernation are generally dedicated to nesting and egg laying by females with males emerging slightly later around early April 59 In the southernmost part of its range where winters are milder the chicken turtle remains active all year round apart from on especially cool days 56 Chicken turtles are also frequently encountered on land during the summer months when the temporary wetlands they inhabit dry out Males especially wander onto the land during this period and may travel great distances in search of alternative water 29 whereas gravid females remain in the wetland as long as possible since extra water is needed for egg production 60 Turtles unable to find a suitable aquatic habitat during particularly dry years may migrate to higher ground and burrow into the earth to undergo aestivation 46 a period of dormancy similar to hibernation Survivorship rates among small juveniles are lower during this period possibly because they lack the fat and water reserves required to withstand long periods without feeding 60 Individuals are known to return to the same terrestrial refugia from one year to the next 60 In total a chicken turtle may spend up to 285 days per year on the land 61 Life cycle editMating and nesting edit nbsp Adult chicken turtle laying eggs Florida The mating season of the chicken turtle can be estimated by the times of year in which male testicular volume is greatest indicating maximum sperm production 62 This period varies by location in Florida the testes are largest during the hottest months of summer while in South Carolina and the slightly cooler climate of Missouri this occurs in the late spring and early summer months roughly May through July 49 56 In Texas courtship may take place in the early spring February to April or fall September to November 63 The chicken turtle s mating ritual is initiated by the male who swims at an angle towards the female turtle until he is facing her head on He then attracts the female s attention by making short rapid swimming motions gazing at her and vibrating his outstretched foreclaws against her face and neck 53 56 Only if the female is receptive does copulation occur 53 There is no evidence of forced insemination as sometimes seen in other related turtles 64 Chicken turtle mating takes place in shallow waters 36 and reproduction can be disrupted by prolonged periods of dry weather 56 Like mating the timing of the nesting season depends on latitude For example in Florida nesting takes place continuously between mid September and early March with the possibility of an interruption if the winter weather is particularly cold 56 Further north nesting may begin earlier in the year around the end of August but is always paused during the coldest months before resuming in the spring 65 In South Carolina and Arkansas nesting and egg laying may recommence in February 56 50 while in Virginia in the northernmost reaches of the chicken turtle s range it may not start again until March 36 This pattern of nesting in winter and hatching in spring is highly unusual the chicken turtle is one of the only native North American turtles to nest at this time of year 56 50 Several reasons have been suggested for why this behavior developed One hypothesis is that it allows the hatchlings to emerge in the spring when there is a good supply of food available and less competition from hatchlings of other turtle species that appear later in the year Furthermore predators of turtle eggs may be less likely to hunt for them in the spring when there are generally fewer to be found 65 Atypically among North American turtles the female chicken turtle can retain fertilized calcified eggs in her oviducts for several months after copulation especially over the winter these eggs will be laid in the spring once the nesting season resumes 66 The female nests on land often in loose soil 49 63 but sometimes in heavier ground 67 She digs out a cylindrical cavity with a depth of around 10 cm 4 in and a diameter at the opening of approximately 8 cm 3 in 44 Nests are usually built close to the water 50 although females are known to wander up to 280 m 306 yd in search of suitable sites 65 Once the nest is ready the female deposits a clutch of between one and nineteen eggs nb 1 The eggs are white with a leathery or parchment like shell 38 50 and elliptical in shape measuring approximately 28 41 mm 1 10 1 61 in by 17 25 mm 0 67 0 98 in 65 Egg mass varies considerably a review of eight studies found reported averages between 9 0 g 0 3 oz and 11 0 g 0 4 oz 69 The mass appears to be positively correlated with female body size and eggs laid in fall are significantly heavier than those laid in spring 70 Several minutes after laying the female will fill in her nest sweeping the dirt over the eggs with her hind legs until they are covered 65 Chicken turtles commonly lay two clutches of eggs per year 68 although in the uninterrupted nesting season of Florida females have been known to produce as many as four 38 Growth and lifespan edit The incubation period of chicken turtle eggs is again dependent on location and temperature In the warmer climate of Florida incubation takes 78 89 days in the wild while in South Carolina it may last up to 152 days 68 Under laboratory conditions which aimed to recreate the very cool soil temperatures as low as 4 C 39 F experienced further north incubation was extended up to 194 days 58 The egg s yolk contains a very high proportion of fats on average 32 5 of dry matter which help to nourish the hatchling during this long period in the nest 70 Inside the egg the embryo goes through a period of little to no development diapause in the late gastrula stage It must experience a period of cool temperatures around 15 22 C 59 72 F before development proceeds when the temperature increases to 24 C 75 F The temperature during this time strongly influences the sex of the hatchling in one study 100 of eggs kept at 25 C 77 F produced male turtles whereas at 30 C 86 F 89 were female 68 When it is ready to emerge from the egg the hatchling breaks through the shell using its egg tooth a sharp thornlike projection on its beak 71 Chicken turtles born in the fall commonly remain in the nest over winter before emerging in the spring 50 meaning that hatchlings from eggs laid in February or March may not leave the nest for over a year 46 Very young hatchlings are almost circular although as they grow their shell becomes less rounded and more elongated 72 Young chicken turtles grow rapidly approximately 25 44 mm 0 98 1 73 in in the first year depending on conditions in drought years growth may be slower 68 The rate of growth is highly variable between regions and populations 73 Growth continues until the turtle reaches sexual maturity which occurs after approximately 2 3 years or at a plastron length of 75 80 mm 2 95 3 15 in for males and around 6 8 years plastron length 141 155 mm 5 55 6 10 in for females 2 The turtle continues to grow after reaching maturity although considerably more slowly Females that reach a length of around 180 mm 7 09 in appear to become much less reproductively active they may only lay eggs every second or third nesting season or they may cease to ovulate altogether 50 The chicken turtle is one of the shortest lived turtles in the world 74 37 Wild chicken turtles have been recaptured up to 15 years after their first capture with some reaching an estimated maximum age of 20 24 years 68 A study by herpetologist Whit Gibbons suggested that less than 1 of chicken turtles live past the age of 15 68 In captivity they may only live for as little as 13 years 1 This short lifespan means that the average female chicken turtle is active for fewer than ten breeding seasons 58 Determining the age of a turtle becomes increasingly difficult as the animal ages in the first few years of its life the turtle s shell may show visible growth rings annuli that can be used to approximate its age 75 Annuli in the turtle s claws can sometimes be seen up to the age of around 14 68 Ecology editDiet edit nbsp Dragonfly nymphs are a favorite food of the chicken turtle Like many emydids chicken turtles are almost completely carnivorous during the first year of their lives However they are unusual in preferring a carnivorous diet into adulthood 76 It has been suggested that this explains the smaller local populations of D reticularia compared to other related turtles due to competition with fish for food especially insects 77 In the wild they are known to prey on crayfish invertebrates tadpoles vegetation and carrion 78 including dead fish and other animals 38 Carr described having seen a chicken turtle eating Nuphar bonnet lily buds 67 while captive adults have been observed feeding on gopher frog tadpoles 79 lettuce and canned fish 45 In a 1997 study of chicken turtle fecal matter collected during the summer months in South Carolina dragonfly nymphs were the most commonly observed food along with snails spiders and insects such as backswimmers and water bugs Only six out of forty three specimens had ingested plant material 77 Investigations into the digestive tract contents of chicken turtles in north central Florida where the eastern and Florida subspecies coexist found similar results Decapods including crayfish and shrimp dragonflies and beetles were the most frequently encountered foods six out of twenty five turtles had consumed trace amounts of plants or algae 80 Research in Oklahoma found evidence that adults of the western subspecies follow a more omnivorous diet than their relatives While crayfish and bugs were still present in the majority of fecal samples 92 6 percent of samples also contained material or seeds of various plants including the common rush and broadleaf cattail 81 The chicken turtle is an aquatic hunter It waits in the water and strikes its long neck out quickly with its mouth open to catch live food 82 relying on sight to detect its prey 83 The length of the neck allows it to capture fast moving prey such as fish and spiders which would otherwise be able to escape 38 Like Blanding s turtle the chicken turtle uses a sucking motion when feeding 76 any water taken in during the process is expelled before the food is swallowed whole 82 The Florida chicken turtle is known to feed passively swimming along with its long neck extended and foraging in clumps of vegetation 76 Predators edit Information regarding predation of the chicken turtle is scarce but it is presumed that common predators such as raccoons skunks and snakes feed on eggs and juvenile turtles 45 76 Fire ants are also known to attack nests and kill hatchlings of D reticularia and other turtles 84 Hibbitts and Hibbitts suggest humans and alligators to be the main predators of the western subspecies 63 while a study in Florida found evidence of red shouldered hawks preying on various turtles including the Florida chicken turtle 85 Otters herons and snapping turtles are also listed as possible predators 48 76 84 The meat of the chicken turtle is considered palatable and was once widely sold at markets throughout the southern United States for use in turtle soup 36 67 it is thought that the vernacular name is a reference to the flavor of its meat 49 It is still sometimes eaten today in rural areas although this is uncommon 45 Consumption by humans is no longer considered to be a significant threat to the chicken turtle population 86 Parasites edit Various parasites have been identified during examinations of chicken turtle specimens In 1968 Fain described a new species of cheyletoid mite Caminacarus deirochelys found in the rectum of a chicken turtle collected in Englewood Florida thirty years earlier 87 The trematode Neopolystoma orbiculare has been reported from the bladder of D reticularia 88 while Telorchis corti is known to parasitize chicken turtles and various other emydids 89 A 2016 study of two chicken turtle specimens captured in Alabama identified a previously unknown species of blood fluke Spirorchis collinsi 90 Conservation edit nbsp Chicken turtle in Virginia where only around 30 adults are thought to remain The chicken turtle population as a whole is currently considered secure and is thought to consist of at least 100 000 adults 2 Local populations are often small but stable however the species is designated by NatureServe as S1 critically imperiled in Virginia and Missouri and S2 imperiled in Arkansas Louisiana North Carolina and Oklahoma 2 The chicken turtle does not appear on the IUCN s Red List of Threatened Species although the Tortoise and Freshwater Turtle Specialist Group s own provisional list considers it Near Threatened 18 At the state level the chicken turtle is protected by various local laws In Virginia where only around 30 adults are thought to remain it has been listed as vulnerable since 1987 48 It is also considered at risk by the Alabama Natural Heritage Program local regulations state that only two turtles may be kept and these must be for personal use e g as pets 82 Along with other native reptiles removal of chicken turtles from their natural habitat is regulated in several states throughout its range including Texas Georgia and North Carolina 86 The chicken turtle is subject to a ban on commercial taking in Arkansas 91 where it is extremely rare 58 In Missouri where until 1995 no sightings had been recorded for at least 33 years nb 2 it is listed as an endangered species making hunting illegal 49 Habitat loss appears to be the most significant threat to the stability of chicken turtle populations 93 86 Human activity is one cause of this the turtle s preferred wetland habitats are often converted for agriculture such as rice farming or building developments In Missouri and Arkansas in particular the destruction of swampland and bottomland hardwood forests is a direct threat to the chicken turtle 49 58 Man made obstacles such as fences and road barriers can also lead to populations becoming isolated 2 Since it prefers to live in small shallow bodies of water that can easily dry out during the hotter months the chicken turtle is also susceptible to the loss of upland habitats surrounding wetlands to which it migrates during periods of drought 82 Migration also leads to turtles especially females in search of suitable nesting sites walking onto roads where they are killed by traffic 63 Fire is a further threat wildfires are becoming increasingly common and while controlled burns can help to protect wetland habitats by decreasing the risk of wildfire chicken turtles that are overwintering on land or have been forced onto the land during drier months can be caught up in them 82 Several locations inhabited by chicken turtles are already under protection having been designated as wildlife reserves or conservation areas However further preservation of wetlands especially temporary ones would be beneficial in ensuring the continued stability of the population 86 In particular the protections currently in place rarely include the surrounding areas of land that the chicken turtle inhabits for much of the year 82 Scientists in Oklahoma have developed quantitative polymerase chain reaction assay tests to enable the presence of four uncommon or vulnerable reptiles including the chicken turtle to be identified through environmental DNA 94 References edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Deirochelys reticularia Notes edit The number of eggs per clutch is given by different sources as 5 12 50 5 15 44 1 12 in South Carolina and 2 19 in Florida 68 The size of the clutch appears to increase with the turtle s plastron length 68 The Amphibians and Reptiles of Arkansas states that the previous sighting occurred in 1957 92 Buhlmann Gibbons and Jackson give a later date of 1962 58 Citations edit a b c Lovich amp Gibbons 2021 p 82 a b c d e f g h Deirochelys reticularia explorer natureserve org NatureServe Retrieved 2022 04 24 a b c d e Ernst amp Barbour 1972 p 174 Buhlmann Gibbons amp Jackson 2008 p 014 1 a b Fritz Uwe Havas Peter 2007 Checklist of Chelonians of the World PDF Vertebrate Zoology 57 2 179 180 doi 10 3897 vz 57 e30895 Retrieved 2022 04 24 Jackson 1978 p 38 a b Sonnini C S Latreille P A 1801 Histoire naturelle des reptiles avec figures dessinees d apres nature Vol 1 Paris Imprimerie Crapelet pp 124 127 Daudin F M 1801 Histoire naturelle generale et particuliere des reptiles Vol 2 Paris L Imprimerie de F Dufart pp 144 147 Schwartz 1956 p 461 a b c d e Buhlmann Gibbons amp Jackson 2008 p 014 2 Agassiz 1857 p 252 Agassiz 1857 p 441 Harper Francis 1940 Some Works of Bartram Daudin Latreille and Sonnini and Their Bearing Upon North American Herpetological Nomenclature Am Midl Nat 23 3 The University of Notre Dame 710 711 doi 10 2307 2420453 JSTOR 2420453 Jackson 1978 p 37 Franklin Carl J 2007 Turtles St Paul Minnesota Voyageur Press p 96 ISBN 978 0 78582 775 7 Taxonomy chapter for Turtle eastern chicken 030064 BOVA booklet Virginia Fish and Wildlife Information Service Retrieved 2022 04 24 Schwartz 1956 p 462 a b c d Rhodin et al 2021 p 135 a b Schwartz 1956 p 468 a b c d Guyer Bailey amp Mount 2015 p 161 a b c d e f Zug amp Schwartz 1971 p 107 2 a b Rhodin et al 2021 p 136 Ernst amp Barbour 1972 p 330 Buhlmann Tuberville amp Gibbons 2008 p 85 Ernst amp Barbour 1972 p 175 Ernst amp Barbour 1972 p 293 Schwartz 1956 p 488 a b c Schwartz 1956 p 498 a b c d Ernst amp Lovich 2009 p 224 Guyer Bailey amp Mount 2015 p 160 Jackson 1978 p 47 a b c Ernst amp Lovich 2009 p 223 a b c d Carr 1952 p 316 Jackson 1978 p 43 Jackson 1978 p 45 a b c d e f g h i j Life History chapter for Turtle eastern chicken 030064 BOVA booklet Virginia Fish and Wildlife Information Service Retrieved 2022 04 26 a b Lovich amp Gibbons 2021 p 83 a b c d e f Buhlmann Gibbons amp Jackson 2008 p 014 3 a b Hibbitts amp Hibbitts 2016 p 160 a b Schwartz 1956 p 464 Stephens Patrick R Wiens John J 2003 Ecological diversification and phylogeny of emydid turtles Biological Journal of the Linnean Society 79 4 577 610 doi 10 1046 j 1095 8312 2003 00211 x a b c Carr 1952 p 318 a b Ernst amp Lovich 2009 p 222 a b c Ernst amp Barbour 1972 p 177 a b c d e Ernst amp Barbour 1972 p 178 a b c d Connell Patia M Species Profile Chicken Turtle Deirochelys reticularia srelherp uga edu Savannah River Ecology Laboratory University of Georgia Retrieved 2022 04 28 Zug amp Schwartz 1971 p 107 1 a b c Status chapter for Turtle eastern chicken 030064 BOVA booklet Virginia Fish and Wildlife Information Service Retrieved 2022 04 24 a b c d e f g h Western Chicken Turtle mdc mo gov Missouri Department of Conservation Retrieved 2022 04 27 a b c d e f g h i Trauth Robison amp Plummer 2004 p 221 Gibbons 1969 p 670 Dinkelacker S A 2014 Demographic and Reproductive Traits of Western Chicken Turtles Deirochelys reticularia miaria in central Arkansas Journal of Herpetology a b c Guyer Bailey amp Mount 2015 p 162 Gibbons 1969 p 676 Hanscom Ryan J Dinkelacker Stephen A McCall Aaron J Parlin Adam F 2020 Demographic traits of freshwater turtles in a maritime forest habitat Herpetologica 76 1 12 21 doi 10 1655 Herpetologica D 19 00037 S2CID 212114331 a b c d e f g h i j Ernst amp Lovich 2009 p 226 a b Ernst amp Barbour 1972 p 176 a b c d e f Buhlmann Gibbons amp Jackson 2008 p 014 4 Gibbons 1969 p 675 a b c Buhlmann Kurt A Congdon Justin D Gibbons J Whitfield Greene Judith L 2009 Ecology of chicken turtles Deirochelys reticularia in a seasonal wetland ecosystem exploiting resource and refuge environment Herpetologica 65 1 39 53 doi 10 1655 08 028R1 1 JSTOR 27669742 S2CID 85392895 Ernst amp Lovich 2009 p 225 Gibbons 1969 p 674 a b c d Hibbitts amp Hibbitts 2016 p 162 Berry James F Shine Richard 1980 Sexual Size Dimorphism and Sexual Selection in Turtles Order Testudines Oecologia 44 2 185 191 Bibcode 1980Oecol 44 185B doi 10 1007 BF00572678 JSTOR 4216009 PMID 28310555 S2CID 2456783 a b c d e Ernst amp Lovich 2009 p 227 Buhlmann Kurt A Lynch Tracy K Gibbons J Whitfield Greene Judith L 1995 Prolonged egg retention in the turtle Deirochelys reticularia in South Carolina Herpetologica 51 4 457 462 JSTOR 3892771 a b c Carr 1952 p 319 a b c d e f g h i Ernst amp Lovich 2009 p 229 Dinkelacker Stephen A Hilzinger Nathanael L 2014 Demographic and reproductive traits of Western Chicken Turtles Deirochelys reticularia miaria in Central Arkansas Journal of Herpetology 48 4 439 444 doi 10 1670 12 227 JSTOR 43287470 S2CID 86489790 a b Congdon Justin D Gibbons J Whitfield Greene Judith L 1983 Parental investment in the Chicken Turtle Deirochelys reticularia Ecology 64 3 419 425 Bibcode 1983Ecol 64 419C doi 10 2307 1939959 JSTOR 1939959 Carr 1952 p 317 Schwartz 1956 p 472 Gibbons 1969 p 372 Congdon J D 2022 Comparing Life Histories of the Shortest Lived Turtle Known Chicken Turtles Dierochelys reticularia with Long Lived Blanding s Turtles Emydoidea blandingii Chelonian Conservation and Biology Gibbons 1969 p 371 a b c d e Ernst amp Lovich 2009 p 231 a b Demuth Jeffrey P Buhlmann Kurt A 1997 Diet of the Turtle Deirochelys reticularia on the Savannah River Site South Carolina Journal of Herpetology 31 3 450 453 doi 10 2307 1565680 JSTOR 1565680 Hibbitts amp Hibbitts 2016 p 161 Redmer Michael Parris Matthew J 2005 Family Ranidae In Rannoo Michael ed Amphibian Declines Berkeley California University of California Press p 538 doi 10 1525 9780520929432 ISBN 0 520 23592 4 Jackson Dale R 1996 Meat on the Move Diet of a Predatory Turtle Deirochelys reticularia Testudines Emydidae PDF Chelonian Conservation and Biology 2 1 105 108 McKnight Donald T Jones Anne C Ligon Day B 2015 The Omnivorous Diet of the Western Chicken Turtle Deirochelys reticularia miaria Copeia 103 2 322 328 doi 10 1643 CH 14 072 S2CID 86844313 a b c d e f Guyer Bailey amp Mount 2015 p 163 Buhlmann Tuberville amp Gibbons 2008 p 87 a b Buhlmann Tuberville amp Gibbons 2008 p 88 Walsh Timothy J Heinrich George L 2015 Red shouldered hawk Buteo lineatus predation of turtles in central Florida Florida Field Naturalist 43 2 79 85 a b c d Buhlmann Gibbons amp Jackson 2008 p 014 5 Fain Alex 1968 Notes sur les Acariens de la famille Cloacaridae Camin et al parasites du cloaque et des tissus profonds des tortues Cheyletoidea Trombidiformes PDF Bulletin de l Institut Royal des Sciences Naturelles de Belgique 44 15 1 33 Loftin Horace 1960 An annotated check list of trematodes and cestodes and their vertebrate hosts from northwest Florida Quarterly Journal of the Florida Academy of Sciences 23 4 302 314 JSTOR 24314969 Wharton G W 1940 The genera Telorchis Protenes and Auridistomum Trematoda Reniferidae The Journal of Parasitology 26 6 497 518 doi 10 2307 3272252 JSTOR 3272252 Roberts Jackson R Orelis Ribeiro Raphael Halanych Kenneth M Arias Cova R Bullard Stephen A 2016 A new species of Spirorchis MacCallum 1918 Digenea Schistosomatoidea and Spirorchis cf scripta from chicken turtle Deirochelys reticularia Emydidae with an emendation and molecular phylogeny of Spirorchis Folia Parasitologica 63 041 doi 10 14411 fp 2016 041 PMID 28003567 Newell Peacock Leslie 2018 07 12 Game and Fish ponders banning turtle harvest arktimes com Arkansas Times Retrieved 2022 04 27 Trauth Robison amp Plummer 2004 p 222 Ernst amp Lovich 2009 p 232 Siler Cameron D Freitas Elyse S Yuri Tamaki Souza Lara Watters Jessa L 2020 Development and validation of four environmental DNA assays for species of conservation concern in the South Central United States Conservation Genetics Resources 13 35 40 doi 10 1007 s12686 020 01167 3 S2CID 224943576 Bibliography edit Agassiz Louis 1857 Contributions to the natural history of the United States of America Vol 1 Boston Massachusetts Little Brown and Company doi 10 5962 bhl title 12644 Retrieved 2022 02 24 Buhlmann Kurt A Gibbons J Whitfield Jackson Dale R 2008 Deirochelys reticularia Latreille 1801 Chicken Turtle PDF Chelonian Research Monographs 5 Lunenburg Massachusetts Chelonian Research Foundation 014 1 014 6 doi 10 3854 crm 5 014 reticularia v1 2008 ISSN 1088 7105 Retrieved 2022 04 24 Buhlmann Kurt Tuberville Tracey Gibbons Whit 2008 Chicken Turtle Turtles of the Southeast Athens Georgia University of Georgia Press pp 84 88 ISBN 978 0 8203 2902 4 Retrieved 2022 05 10 Carr Archie F 1952 Genus Deirochelys The Chicken Turtles Handbook of Turtles The Turtles of the United States Canada and Baja California paperback ed Ithaca New York Cornell University Press pp 316 319 doi 10 7591 9781501722479 007 ISBN 0 8014 8254 2 S2CID 239377136 Ernst Carl H Barbour Roger William 1972 Deirochelys reticularia Turtles of the United States Lexington Kentucky The University Press of Kentucky pp 174 178 ISBN 0 8131 1272 9 Retrieved 2022 04 24 Ernst Carl H Lovich Jeffrey E 2009 Chicken Turtles Turtles of the United States and Canada Baltimore Maryland Johns Hopkins University Press pp 222 232 ISBN 978 0 8018 9121 2 Retrieved 2022 02 24 Gibbons J Whitfield 1969 Ecology and Population Dynamics of the Chicken Turtle Deirochelys reticularia Copeia 1969 4 American Society of Ichthyologists and Herpetologists 669 676 doi 10 2307 1441791 JSTOR 1441791 Guyer Craig Bailey Mark A Mount Robert L 2015 Chicken Turtles Turtles of Alabama Tuscaloosa Alabama University of Alabama Press pp 160 163 ISBN 978 0 8173 5806 8 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Hibbitts Troy D Hibbitts Terry L 2016 Chicken Turtle Texas Turtles amp Crocodilians A Field Guide Austin Texas University of Texas Press pp 159 162 doi 10 7560 307779 005 ISBN 978 1 4773 0777 9 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Jackson Dale R 1978 Evolution and fossil record of the chicken turtle Deirochelys with a re evaluation of the genus Tulane Studies in Zoology and Botany 20 New Orleans Louisiana Tulane University 35 56 Retrieved 2022 04 24 Lovich Jeffrey E Gibbons Whit 2021 Chicken Turtles Turtles of the World Princeton New Jersey Princeton University Press pp 82 83 doi 10 1515 9780691229034 ISBN 978 1 4773 0777 9 S2CID 245884540 Rhodin A G J Iverson J B Bour R Fritz U Georges A Shaffer H B Van Dijk P P 2021 Turtles of the World Annotated Checklist and Atlas of Taxonomy Synonymy Distribution and Conservation Status 9th Ed PDF Chelonian Research Monographs 8 Lunenburg Massachusetts Chelonian Research Foundation 1 472 doi 10 3854 crm 8 checklist atlas v9 2021 ISBN 9780991036837 ISSN 1088 7105 S2CID 244279960 Retrieved 2022 04 25 Schwartz Albert 1956 Geographic variation in the chicken turtle Fieldiana Zoology 34 41 Chicago Illinois Chicago Natural History Museum 461 503 Retrieved 2022 04 24 Trauth Stanley E Robison Henry W Plummer Michael V 2004 Western Chicken Turtle Deirochelys reticularia miaria Schwartz The Amphibians and Reptiles of Arkansas Fayetteville Arkansas The University of Arkansas Press pp 220 222 ISBN 1 55728 737 6 Retrieved 2022 04 27 Zug George R Schwartz Albert 1971 Deirochelys D reticularia PDF Catalogue of American Amphibians and Reptiles 107 1 107 3 doi 10 15781 T2ST7F22C Retrieved 2022 04 26 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Chicken turtle amp oldid 1220832531, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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