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Diamondback terrapin

The diamondback terrapin or simply terrapin (Malaclemys terrapin) is a species of turtle native to the brackish coastal tidal marshes of the Northeastern and southern United States, and in Bermuda.[6] It belongs to the monotypic genus Malaclemys. It has one of the largest ranges of all turtles in North America, stretching as far south as the Florida Keys and as far north as Cape Cod.[7]

Diamondback terrapin
Photographed in the wild
CITES Appendix II (CITES)[2]
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Reptilia
Order: Testudines
Suborder: Cryptodira
Superfamily: Testudinoidea
Family: Emydidae
Genus: Malaclemys
Gray, 1844 [3]
Species:
M. terrapin
Binomial name
Malaclemys terrapin
(Schoepff, 1793) [3]
Synonyms[4][5]
List
  • Malaclemys terrapin terrapin
  • Testudo terrapin Schoepff, 1793
  • Testudo concentrica Shaw, 1802
  • Testudo ocellata Link, 1807
  • Testudo concentrata Kuhl, 1820 (ex errore)
  • Emys concentrica Gray, 1831 (Duméril & Bibron, 1830[4])
  • Testudo concentrica var polita Gray, 1831
  • Emys terrapin Holbrook, 1842
  • Emys macrocephalus Gray,1844
  • Malaclemys concentrica Gray, 1844 (1863[4])
  • Emys macrocephala LeConte,1854
  • Emys terrapene LeConte,1856 (ex errore)
  • Clemmys terrapin Strauch, 1862
  • Malaclemmys concentrica Gray, 1870
  • Malacoclemmys terrapen Boulenger, 1889 (ex errore)
  • Malaclemys centrata concentrica Cochran, 1932[4]
  • Malaclemys terrapin Bangs, 1896
  • Malaclemmys centrata concentrica Hay, 1904
  • Malaclemys terrapin terrapin Lindholm, 1929
  • Malaclemys terrapene Stephens & Wiens, 2003
  • Malaclemys terrapin centrata
  • Testudo centrata Latreille, 1801
  • Emys centrata Schweigger, 1812
  • Emys concentrica var livida Gray, 1831
  • Clemmys (Clemmys) centrata Fitzinger, 1835
  • Malaclemmys centrata Lönnberg, 1894
  • Malaclemmys terrapin centrata Mittleman, 1944
  • Malaclemys terrapin centrata Mittleman, 1945
  • Malaclemys terrapin centra Highfield, 1996 (ex errore)
  • Malaclemys terrapin littoralis
  • Malaclemmys littoralis Hay, 1904
  • Malaclemys centrata littoralis Siebenrock, 1909
  • Malaclemys pileata littoralis Stejneger & Barbour, 1917
  • Malaclemys terrapin littoralis Lindholm, 1929
  • Malaclemys terrapin macrospilota
  • Malaclemmys macrospilota Hay, 1904
  • Malaclemys centrata macrospilota Siebenrock, 1909
  • Malaclemys pileata macrospilota Stejneger & Barbour, 1917
  • Malaclemys terrapin macrospilota Lindholm, 1929
  • Malaclemys terrapin pileata
  • Emys pileata Wied, 1865
  • Malaclemmys pileata Hay, 1904
  • Malaclemys centrata pileata Siebenrock, 1909
  • Malaclemys pileata pileata Stejneger & Barbour, 1917
  • Malaclemys terrapin pileata Lindholm, 1929
  • Malaclemys terrapin rhizophorarum
  • Malaclemys tuberculifera Gray, 1844 (nomen oblitum)
  • Malaclemmys littoralis rhizophorarum Fowler, 1906 (nomen protectum)
  • Malaclemmys terrapin rhizophorarum Carr, 1946
  • Malaclemys terrapin rhizophorarum Carr, 1952
  • Malaclemys terrapin rhizophararum Anderson, 1985 (ex errore)
  • Malaclemys terrapin tequesta
  • Malaclemys terrapin tequesta Schwartz, 1955

The name "terrapin" is derived from the Algonquian word torope.[8] It applies to Malaclemys terrapin in both British English and American English. The name originally was used by early European settlers in North America to describe these brackish-water turtles that inhabited neither freshwater habitats nor the sea. It retains this primary meaning in American English.[8] In British English, however, other semi-aquatic turtle species, such as the red-eared slider, might also be called terrapins.[citation needed]

Description

 
The diamond pattern of the turtle's back
 
Adult female

The common name refers to the diamond pattern on top of its shell (carapace), but the overall pattern and coloration vary greatly. No two diamondback terrapins look alike.[9] The shell is usually wider at the back than in the front, and from above it appears wedge-shaped. The shell coloring can vary from brown to grey, and its body color can be grey, brown, yellow, or white. All have a unique pattern of wiggly, black markings or spots on their body and head. The diamondback terrapin has large webbed feet.[10] The species is sexually dimorphic in that the males grow to a carapace length of approximately 13 cm (5 in), while the females grow to an average carapace length of around 19 cm (7+12 in), though they are capable of growing larger. The largest female on record was just over 23 cm (9 in) in carapace length. Specimens from regions that are consistently warmer in temperature tend to be larger than those from cooler, more northern areas.[11] Male diamondback terrapins weigh 300 g (11 oz) on average, while females weigh around 500 g (18 oz).[12] The largest females can weigh up to 1 kg (35 oz).[13]

Adaptations to their environment

Terrapins look much like their freshwater relatives, but are well adapted to the near shore marine environment. They have several adaptations that allow them to survive in varying salinities. They can live in full strength salt water for extended periods,[14] and their skin is largely impermeable to salt. Terrapins have lachrymal salt glands,[15][16] not present in their relatives, which are used primarily when the turtle is dehydrated. They can distinguish between drinking water of different salinities.[17] Terrapins also exhibit unusual and sophisticated behavior to obtain fresh water, including drinking the freshwater surface layer that can accumulate on top of salt water during rainfall and raising their heads into the air with mouths open to catch falling rain drops.[17][18]

Terrapins are strong swimmers. They have strongly webbed hind feet, but not flippers like sea turtles do. Like their relatives (Graptemys), they have strong jaws for crushing shells of prey, such as clams and snails. This is especially true of females, who have larger and more muscular jaws than males.[19]

Subspecies

Seven subspecies are recognized, including the nominate race.

  • M. t. centrata (Latreille, 1801) – Carolina diamondback terrapin (Georgia, Florida, North Carolina, South Carolina)[3]
  • M. t. littoralis (Hay, 1904) – Texas diamondback terrapin (Texas)[3]
  • M. t. macrospilota (Hay, 1904) – ornate diamondback terrapin (Florida) [3]
  • M. t. pileata (Wied, 1865) – Mississippi diamondback terrapin (Alabama, Florida, Louisiana, Mississippi, Texas)[3]
  • M. t. rhizophorarum Fowler, 1906 – mangrove diamondback terrapin (Florida)[3]
  • M. t. tequesta Schwartz, 1955 – East Florida diamondback terrapin (Florida)[3]
  • M. t. terrapin (Schoepff, 1793) – northern diamondback terrapin (Connecticut, Delaware, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Rhode Island, Virginia)[20][21][4][22]

The isolated Bermudan population, which arrived in Bermuda on its own rather than being introduced by humans, has not yet been officially assigned to a subspecies but, based on mtDNA, it is closely related to the population from the Carolinas.[6]

Distribution and habitat

 
Texas diamond-backed terrapin (Malaclemys terrapin littoralis), Galveston County, Texas (8 May 2008)

Diamondback terrapins live in the very narrow strip of coastal habitats on the Atlantic and Gulf Coasts of the United States, from as far north as Cape Cod, Massachusetts, to the southern tip of Florida and around the Gulf Coast to Texas. In most of their range, terrapins live in Spartina marshes that are flooded at high tide, but in Florida they also live in mangrove swamps.[23] This turtle can survive in freshwater as well as full-strength ocean water, but adults prefer intermediate salinities. Despite its preference for salt water, it is not a true sea turtle and is not fully marine. They have no competition from other turtles, although common snapping turtles do occasionally make use of salty marshes.[24] It is unclear why terrapins do not inhabit the upper reaches of rivers within their range, as in captivity they tolerate fresh water. It is possible they are limited by the distribution of their prey.[25] Terrapins live quite close to shore, unlike sea turtles, which wander far out to sea; however, a population of terrapins on Bermuda has been determined to be self-established rather than introduced by humans.[6] Terrapins tend to live in the same areas for most or all of their lives, and do not make long-distance migrations.[26][27][28]

Life cycle

Adult diamondback terrapins mate in the early spring, and clutches of 4–22[29] eggs are laid in sand dunes in the early summer. They hatch in late summer or early fall. Maturity in males is reached in 2–3 years at around 115 mm (4+12 in) in length; it takes longer for females: 6–7 years (8–10 years for northern diamondback terrapins) at a length of around 170 mm (6+34 in).[citation needed]

Reproduction

Like all reptiles, terrapin fertilization occurs internally. Courtship has been seen in May and June, and is similar to that of the closely related red-eared slider (Trachemys scripta).[30] Female terrapins can mate with multiple males and store sperm for years,[31] resulting in some clutches of eggs with more than one father.

Like many turtles, terrapins have temperature dependent sex determination, meaning that the sex of hatchlings is the result of incubation temperature. Females can lay up to three clutches of eggs/year in the wild,[32] and up to five clutches/year in captivity.[33] It is not known how often they may skip reproduction, so true clutch frequency is unknown.

Females may wander considerable distances on land before nesting. Nests are usually laid in sand dunes or scrub vegetation near the ocean[34] in June and July, but nesting may start as early as late April in Florida.[35] Females will quickly abandon a nest attempt if they are disturbed while nesting. Clutch sizes vary latitudinally, with average clutch sizes as low as 5.8/eggs/clutch in southern Florida[36] to 10.9 in New York.[32] After covering the nest, terrapins quickly return to the ocean and do not return except to nest again.

The eggs usually hatch in 60–85 days, depending on the temperature and the depth of the nest. Hatchlings usually emerge from the nest in August and September, but may overwinter in the nest after hatching.[37] Nest predation is a large threat to Diamondback Terrapins. A study was done on 3159 nests finding that the greatest predator was racoons and predated nests were completely emptied of egg.[32] Hatchlings sometimes stay on land in the nesting areas in both fall and spring and they may remain terrestrial for much or all of the winter in some places.[35][38] Hatchling terrapins are freeze tolerant,[37] which may facilitate overwintering on land. Hatchlings have lower salt tolerance than adults and Gibbons et al.[26] provided strong evidence that one- and two-year-old terrapins use different habitats than do old individuals.

Growth rates, age of maturity, and maximum age are not well known for terrapins in the wild, but males reach sexual maturity before females because of their smaller adult size. In females at least, sexual maturity is dependent on size rather than age.[39] Estimations of age based on counts of growth rings on the shell are as yet untested, so it is not clear how to determine the ages of wild terrapins.

Seasonal activities

Because nesting is the only terrapin activity that occurs on land, most other aspects of terrapin behavior are poorly known. Limited data suggest that terrapins hibernate in the colder months in most of their range, in the mud of creeks and marshes.[40]

Diet

The diamondback terrapin typically feeds on fish, crustaceans (such as shrimp[41] and crabs[42]) marine worms,[42] marine snails (especially the saltmarsh periwinkle ),[43] clams, barnacles,[44] mussels, other mollusks,[45] insects, carrion, and sometimes ingest small amounts of plant material, such as algae.[42] At high densities the terrapin may eat enough invertebrates to have ecosystem-level effects, partially because periwinkles themselves can overgraze important marsh plants, such as cordgrass (Spartina alterniflora).[46] Gender and age can greatly affect the diet of the diamondback terrapin, males and juvenile females tend to have less diversity in their diet. Adult females, due to their powerful, defined jaw, will occasionally feed on crustaceans such as crabs and are more likely to consume hard-shelled mollusks.[47]

Conservation

 
A juvenile diamondback terrapin

Status

In the early 1900s, the species was considered a delicacy and was hunted almost to extinction.[48] The population also decreased due to the development of coastal areas, terrapins being susceptible to wounds from the propellers on motorboats.

Another common cause of death is the trapping of the turtles in recreational crab traps, as the turtles are attracted to the same bait as the crabs.[49] The Wetlands Institute estimates that a minimum of 14,000 to 15,000 terrapins drown in crab traps annually set along the New Jersey coast alone.[50] Countless more drown or starve to death in ghost traps, abandoned or lost crab traps along with discarded nets, throughout their habitat.[51] Among two such abandoned crab pots in a tidal marsh in Georgia, a study found 133 dead terrapins, according to the Center for Biological Diversity.[52]

Further, an increase in seawalls and bulkheads being built for storm and erosion control, exacerbated by climate change and sea level rise, inadvertently eliminate terrapin's nesting habitat on beaches and upland areas with soft shorelines.[53][54]

Due to these factors, the diamondback terrapin is listed as an endangered species in Rhode Island, a threatened species in Massachusetts and is considered a "species of concern" in Georgia, Delaware, Alabama, Louisiana, North Carolina, and Virginia. The diamondback terrapin is listed as a "high priority species" under the South Carolina Wildlife Action Plan. In New Jersey, it was recommended to be listed as a Species of Special Concern in 2001. In July 2016, the species was removed from the New Jersey game list and is now listed as non-game with no hunting season. In Connecticut, there is no open hunting season for this animal. However, it holds no federal conservation status.[55] In 2021, a terrapin was hatched in Massachusetts with two heads, two gastrointestinal systems, and two spines that are fused together.[56]

Conservation status

The species is classified as Vulnerable by the IUCN due to decreasing population numbers in most of its range.[57] There is limited protection for terrapins on a state-by-state level throughout its range; it is listed as Endangered in Rhode Island and Threatened in Massachusetts. The Diamondback Terrapin Working Group [58] deal with regional protection issues. There is no national protection except through the Lacey Act, and little international protection.[citation needed]

Diamondback terrapins are the only U.S. turtles that inhabit the brackish waters of estuaries, tidal creeks and salt marshes. With a historic range stretching from Massachusetts to Texas, terrapin populations have been severely depleted by land development and other human impacts along the Atlantic coast.[citation needed]

Earthwatch Institute, a global non-profit that teams volunteers with scientists to conduct important environmental research, supports a research program called "Tagging the Terrapins of the Jersey Shore." This program allows volunteers to explore the coastal sprawl of New Jersey's Ocean County on Barnegat Bay, one of the most extensive salt marsh ecosystems on the East Coast, in search of this ornate turtle. On this project, volunteers contribute to environmental sustainability in the face of rampant development. Veteran turtle scientists Dr. Hal Avery, Dr. Jim Spotila, Dr. Walter Bien and Dr. Ed Standora are overseeing this program and the viability of terrapin populations in the face of growing environmental change.[59]

Threats

The conservation status was heavily impacted by the consumption of diamondback terrapins in the 1900s when their sweet meat eventually became a multi-million dollar industry for gourmet restaurants.[48] Around the 1920s, with the enforcement of prohibition, the consumption of diamondback terrapins declined.[48] Since then, however, the population has never fully recovered. Another threat is shellfish and mussels cause exposure to paralytic shellfish toxins (PST) that are a result of harmful algal blooms that have been prominent along the coastline where diamondback terrapins reside.[60] Gastrointestinal studies have identified the presence of ingested PST in their tissues which causes muscle weakness, paralysis, etc. that eventually leads to death.[60]

The major threats to diamondback terrapins are all associated with humans and probably differ in different parts of their range. People tend to build their cities on ocean coasts near the mouths of large rivers and in doing so they have destroyed many of the huge marshes that terrapins inhabited.[61] Nationwide, probably >75% of the salt marshes where terrapins lived have been destroyed or altered. Currently, ocean level rise threatens the remainder.

Traps used to catch crabs, both commercially and privately, have commonly caught and drowned many diamondback terrapins,[26] which can result in male-biased populations, local population declines, and even extinctions.[27][62] When these traps are lost or abandoned ("ghost traps"), they can kill terrapins for many years. Terrapin-excluding devices are available to retrofit crab traps; these reduce the number of terrapins captured while having little or no impact on crab capture rates.[63][64] In some states (NJ, DE, MD), these devices are required by law.

Nests, hatchlings, and sometimes adults[65] are commonly eaten by raccoons, foxes, rats[32][66][67] and many species of birds, especially crows and gulls.[35][68] Density of these predators are often increased because of their association with humans. Predation rates can be extremely high; predation by raccoons on terrapin nests at Jamaica Bay Wildlife Refuge in New York varied from 92 to 100% each year from 1998 to 2008,[32] Burke unpubl. data).

Terrapins are killed by cars when nesting females cross roads[69] and mortality can be high enough to seriously affect populations.[70] Terrapins are still harvested for food in some states. Terrapins may be affected by pollutants such as metals and organic compounds,[71] but this has not been demonstrated in wild populations.

There is an active casual and professional pet trade in terrapins and it is unknown how many are removed from the wild for this purpose. Some people breed the species in captivity[72] and some color variants are considered especially desirable. In Europe, Malaclemys are widely kept as pets, as are many closely related species.

Relationship with humans

 
University of Maryland's Testudo statue

In Maryland, diamondback terrapins were so plentiful in the 18th century that slaves protested the excessive use of this food source as their main protein. Late in the 19th century, demand for turtle soup claimed a harvest of 89,150 pounds from Chesapeake Bay in one year. In 1899, terrapin was offered on the dinner menu of renowned Delmonico's Restaurant in New York City as its third most expensive item. Either Maryland or Baltimore terrapin was available for $2.50 (equivalent to $75.46 in 2018). Although demand was high, over-harvesting diminished capture to a mere 823 pounds by 1920.[73]

According to the FAA National Wildlife Strike Database, a total of 18 strikes between diamondback terrapins and civil aircraft were reported in the US from 1990 to 2007, none of which caused damage to the aircraft.[74] On July 8, 2009, flights at John F. Kennedy Airport in New York City were delayed for up to one and a half hours as 78 diamondback terrapins had invaded one of the runways. The turtles, which according to airport authorities were believed to have entered the runway in order to nest, were removed and released back into the wild.[75] A similar incident happened on June 29, 2011, when over 150 turtles crossed runway 4, closing the runway and disrupting air traffic. Those terrapins were also relocated safely.[76] The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey installed a turtle barrier along runway 4L at JFK to reduce the number of terrapins on the runway and encourage them to nest elsewhere.[77] Nevertheless, on June 26, 2014, 86 terrapins made it onto the same runway, as a high tide carried them over the barrier. Their population is controlled by the raccoon population; it has been shown that as the raccoons decrease in number, mating terrapins increase, leading to increased turtle activity at the airport.[78]

Many human activities threaten the safety of diamondback terrapins. The terrapins get caught and drown in crab nets that humans put out, are suffocated by pollution that humans greatly contribute to, and lose their marsh and estuarine habitats because of urban development.[79]

History as a delicacy

Part of the pleasure of eating terrapin when the fashion was at its height, however, was its outré, bizarre, even monstrous essential nature...Killing, cleaning, and preparing terrapin is not easy...

— Paul Freedman[80]

Diamondback terrapins were heavily harvested for food in colonial America and probably before that by Native Americans. Terrapins were so abundant and easily obtained that slaves and even the Continental Army ate large numbers of them.

In the 19th century, a dish called "Terrapin à la Maryland", a stew with cream and sherry, was a canonical element, along with canvasback duck, of the elegant and regional "Maryland Feast" menu, an "elite standard...that lasted for decades".[80]

By 1917, terrapins sold for as much as $5 each (equivalent to $95.66 in 2017).[66] Huge numbers of terrapins were harvested from marshes and marketed in cities. By the early 1900s, populations in the northern part of the range were severely depleted and the southern part was greatly reduced as well.[81] As early as 1902 the U.S. Bureau of Fisheries (which later became the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service) recognized that terrapin populations were declining and started building large research facilities, centered at the Beaufort, North Carolina Fisheries Laboratory, to investigate methods for captive breeding terrapins for food.[82] People tried (unsuccessfully) to establish them in many other locations, including San Francisco.[83]

Use as a symbol

Maryland named the diamondback terrapin its official state reptile in 1994. The University of Maryland, College Park has used the species as its nickname (the Maryland Terrapins) and mascot (Testudo) since 1933, and the school newspaper has been named The Diamondback since 1921. Accordingly, the athletic teams are often known as "Terps" for short.[84] The Baltimore baseball club entry in the Federal League during 1914 and 1915 was called the Baltimore Terrapins. The terrapin has also been a symbol of the Grateful Dead, upon the release of their studio album, "Terrapin Station"; as a result, many images of the terrapin dancing with a tambourine appear on posters and t-shirts in Grateful Dead memorabilia. Inspired by the former song, the Terrapin Beer Company also uses a terrapin as its namesake and logo on its packaging.[85]

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Bibliography

  • Conant, Roger (1975). A Field Guide to Reptiles and Amphibians of Eastern and Central North America (2nd ed.). Boston: Houghton Mifflin.
  • Smith, Hobart Muir; Brody, E.D. (1982). Reptiles of North America: A Guide to Field Identification. New York: Golden Press.

External links

  • Jonathan's Diamondback Terrapin World
  • Malaclemys Gallery
  • Species Malaclemys terrapin at The Reptile Database


diamondback, terrapin, diamondback, terrapin, simply, terrapin, malaclemys, terrapin, species, turtle, native, brackish, coastal, tidal, marshes, northeastern, southern, united, states, bermuda, belongs, monotypic, genus, malaclemys, largest, ranges, turtles, . The diamondback terrapin or simply terrapin Malaclemys terrapin is a species of turtle native to the brackish coastal tidal marshes of the Northeastern and southern United States and in Bermuda 6 It belongs to the monotypic genus Malaclemys It has one of the largest ranges of all turtles in North America stretching as far south as the Florida Keys and as far north as Cape Cod 7 Diamondback terrapinPhotographed in the wildConservation statusVulnerable IUCN 3 1 1 CITES Appendix II CITES 2 Scientific classificationKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass ReptiliaOrder TestudinesSuborder CryptodiraSuperfamily TestudinoideaFamily EmydidaeGenus MalaclemysGray 1844 3 Species M terrapinBinomial nameMalaclemys terrapin Schoepff 1793 3 Synonyms 4 5 List Malaclemys terrapin terrapinTestudo terrapin Schoepff 1793Testudo concentrica Shaw 1802Testudo ocellata Link 1807Testudo concentrata Kuhl 1820 ex errore Emys concentrica Gray 1831 Dumeril amp Bibron 1830 4 Testudo concentrica var polita Gray 1831Emys terrapin Holbrook 1842Emys macrocephalus Gray 1844Malaclemys concentrica Gray 1844 1863 4 Emys macrocephala LeConte 1854Emys terrapene LeConte 1856 ex errore Clemmys terrapin Strauch 1862Malaclemmys concentrica Gray 1870Malacoclemmys terrapen Boulenger 1889 ex errore Malaclemys centrata concentricaCochran 1932 4 Malaclemys terrapin Bangs 1896Malaclemmys centrata concentrica Hay 1904Malaclemys terrapin terrapin Lindholm 1929Malaclemys terrapene Stephens amp Wiens 2003Malaclemys terrapin centrataTestudo centrata Latreille 1801Emys centrata Schweigger 1812Emys concentrica var livida Gray 1831Clemmys Clemmys centrata Fitzinger 1835Malaclemmys centrata Lonnberg 1894Malaclemmys terrapin centrata Mittleman 1944Malaclemys terrapin centrata Mittleman 1945Malaclemys terrapin centra Highfield 1996 ex errore Malaclemys terrapin littoralisMalaclemmys littoralis Hay 1904Malaclemys centrata littoralis Siebenrock 1909Malaclemys pileata littoralis Stejneger amp Barbour 1917Malaclemys terrapin littoralis Lindholm 1929Malaclemys terrapin macrospilotaMalaclemmys macrospilota Hay 1904Malaclemys centrata macrospilota Siebenrock 1909Malaclemys pileata macrospilota Stejneger amp Barbour 1917Malaclemys terrapin macrospilota Lindholm 1929Malaclemys terrapin pileataEmys pileata Wied 1865Malaclemmys pileata Hay 1904Malaclemys centrata pileata Siebenrock 1909Malaclemys pileata pileata Stejneger amp Barbour 1917Malaclemys terrapin pileata Lindholm 1929Malaclemys terrapin rhizophorarumMalaclemys tuberculifera Gray 1844 nomen oblitum Malaclemmys littoralis rhizophorarum Fowler 1906 nomen protectum Malaclemmys terrapin rhizophorarum Carr 1946Malaclemys terrapin rhizophorarum Carr 1952Malaclemys terrapin rhizophararum Anderson 1985 ex errore Malaclemys terrapin tequestaMalaclemys terrapin tequesta Schwartz 1955The name terrapin is derived from the Algonquian word torope 8 It applies to Malaclemys terrapin in both British English and American English The name originally was used by early European settlers in North America to describe these brackish water turtles that inhabited neither freshwater habitats nor the sea It retains this primary meaning in American English 8 In British English however other semi aquatic turtle species such as the red eared slider might also be called terrapins citation needed Contents 1 Description 1 1 Adaptations to their environment 1 2 Subspecies 2 Distribution and habitat 3 Life cycle 3 1 Reproduction 3 2 Seasonal activities 4 Diet 5 Conservation 5 1 Status 5 2 Conservation status 5 3 Threats 6 Relationship with humans 6 1 History as a delicacy 6 2 Use as a symbol 7 References 8 Bibliography 9 External linksDescription Edit The diamond pattern of the turtle s back Adult female The common name refers to the diamond pattern on top of its shell carapace but the overall pattern and coloration vary greatly No two diamondback terrapins look alike 9 The shell is usually wider at the back than in the front and from above it appears wedge shaped The shell coloring can vary from brown to grey and its body color can be grey brown yellow or white All have a unique pattern of wiggly black markings or spots on their body and head The diamondback terrapin has large webbed feet 10 The species is sexually dimorphic in that the males grow to a carapace length of approximately 13 cm 5 in while the females grow to an average carapace length of around 19 cm 7 1 2 in though they are capable of growing larger The largest female on record was just over 23 cm 9 in in carapace length Specimens from regions that are consistently warmer in temperature tend to be larger than those from cooler more northern areas 11 Male diamondback terrapins weigh 300 g 11 oz on average while females weigh around 500 g 18 oz 12 The largest females can weigh up to 1 kg 35 oz 13 Adaptations to their environment Edit Terrapins look much like their freshwater relatives but are well adapted to the near shore marine environment They have several adaptations that allow them to survive in varying salinities They can live in full strength salt water for extended periods 14 and their skin is largely impermeable to salt Terrapins have lachrymal salt glands 15 16 not present in their relatives which are used primarily when the turtle is dehydrated They can distinguish between drinking water of different salinities 17 Terrapins also exhibit unusual and sophisticated behavior to obtain fresh water including drinking the freshwater surface layer that can accumulate on top of salt water during rainfall and raising their heads into the air with mouths open to catch falling rain drops 17 18 Terrapins are strong swimmers They have strongly webbed hind feet but not flippers like sea turtles do Like their relatives Graptemys they have strong jaws for crushing shells of prey such as clams and snails This is especially true of females who have larger and more muscular jaws than males 19 Subspecies Edit Seven subspecies are recognized including the nominate race M t centrata Latreille 1801 Carolina diamondback terrapin Georgia Florida North Carolina South Carolina 3 M t littoralis Hay 1904 Texas diamondback terrapin Texas 3 M t macrospilota Hay 1904 ornate diamondback terrapin Florida 3 M t pileata Wied 1865 Mississippi diamondback terrapin Alabama Florida Louisiana Mississippi Texas 3 M t rhizophorarum Fowler 1906 mangrove diamondback terrapin Florida 3 M t tequesta Schwartz 1955 East Florida diamondback terrapin Florida 3 M t terrapin Schoepff 1793 northern diamondback terrapin Connecticut Delaware Maryland Massachusetts New Jersey New York North Carolina Rhode Island Virginia 20 21 4 22 The isolated Bermudan population which arrived in Bermuda on its own rather than being introduced by humans has not yet been officially assigned to a subspecies but based on mtDNA it is closely related to the population from the Carolinas 6 Distribution and habitat Edit Texas diamond backed terrapin Malaclemys terrapin littoralis Galveston County Texas 8 May 2008 Diamondback terrapins live in the very narrow strip of coastal habitats on the Atlantic and Gulf Coasts of the United States from as far north as Cape Cod Massachusetts to the southern tip of Florida and around the Gulf Coast to Texas In most of their range terrapins live in Spartina marshes that are flooded at high tide but in Florida they also live in mangrove swamps 23 This turtle can survive in freshwater as well as full strength ocean water but adults prefer intermediate salinities Despite its preference for salt water it is not a true sea turtle and is not fully marine They have no competition from other turtles although common snapping turtles do occasionally make use of salty marshes 24 It is unclear why terrapins do not inhabit the upper reaches of rivers within their range as in captivity they tolerate fresh water It is possible they are limited by the distribution of their prey 25 Terrapins live quite close to shore unlike sea turtles which wander far out to sea however a population of terrapins on Bermuda has been determined to be self established rather than introduced by humans 6 Terrapins tend to live in the same areas for most or all of their lives and do not make long distance migrations 26 27 28 Life cycle EditAdult diamondback terrapins mate in the early spring and clutches of 4 22 29 eggs are laid in sand dunes in the early summer They hatch in late summer or early fall Maturity in males is reached in 2 3 years at around 115 mm 4 1 2 in in length it takes longer for females 6 7 years 8 10 years for northern diamondback terrapins at a length of around 170 mm 6 3 4 in citation needed Reproduction Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Like all reptiles terrapin fertilization occurs internally Courtship has been seen in May and June and is similar to that of the closely related red eared slider Trachemys scripta 30 Female terrapins can mate with multiple males and store sperm for years 31 resulting in some clutches of eggs with more than one father Like many turtles terrapins have temperature dependent sex determination meaning that the sex of hatchlings is the result of incubation temperature Females can lay up to three clutches of eggs year in the wild 32 and up to five clutches year in captivity 33 It is not known how often they may skip reproduction so true clutch frequency is unknown Females may wander considerable distances on land before nesting Nests are usually laid in sand dunes or scrub vegetation near the ocean 34 in June and July but nesting may start as early as late April in Florida 35 Females will quickly abandon a nest attempt if they are disturbed while nesting Clutch sizes vary latitudinally with average clutch sizes as low as 5 8 eggs clutch in southern Florida 36 to 10 9 in New York 32 After covering the nest terrapins quickly return to the ocean and do not return except to nest again The eggs usually hatch in 60 85 days depending on the temperature and the depth of the nest Hatchlings usually emerge from the nest in August and September but may overwinter in the nest after hatching 37 Nest predation is a large threat to Diamondback Terrapins A study was done on 3159 nests finding that the greatest predator was racoons and predated nests were completely emptied of egg 32 Hatchlings sometimes stay on land in the nesting areas in both fall and spring and they may remain terrestrial for much or all of the winter in some places 35 38 Hatchling terrapins are freeze tolerant 37 which may facilitate overwintering on land Hatchlings have lower salt tolerance than adults and Gibbons et al 26 provided strong evidence that one and two year old terrapins use different habitats than do old individuals Growth rates age of maturity and maximum age are not well known for terrapins in the wild but males reach sexual maturity before females because of their smaller adult size In females at least sexual maturity is dependent on size rather than age 39 Estimations of age based on counts of growth rings on the shell are as yet untested so it is not clear how to determine the ages of wild terrapins Seasonal activities Edit Because nesting is the only terrapin activity that occurs on land most other aspects of terrapin behavior are poorly known Limited data suggest that terrapins hibernate in the colder months in most of their range in the mud of creeks and marshes 40 Diet EditThe diamondback terrapin typically feeds on fish crustaceans such as shrimp 41 and crabs 42 marine worms 42 marine snails especially the saltmarsh periwinkle 43 clams barnacles 44 mussels other mollusks 45 insects carrion and sometimes ingest small amounts of plant material such as algae 42 At high densities the terrapin may eat enough invertebrates to have ecosystem level effects partially because periwinkles themselves can overgraze important marsh plants such as cordgrass Spartina alterniflora 46 Gender and age can greatly affect the diet of the diamondback terrapin males and juvenile females tend to have less diversity in their diet Adult females due to their powerful defined jaw will occasionally feed on crustaceans such as crabs and are more likely to consume hard shelled mollusks 47 Conservation EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message A juvenile diamondback terrapin Status Edit In the early 1900s the species was considered a delicacy and was hunted almost to extinction 48 The population also decreased due to the development of coastal areas terrapins being susceptible to wounds from the propellers on motorboats Another common cause of death is the trapping of the turtles in recreational crab traps as the turtles are attracted to the same bait as the crabs 49 The Wetlands Institute estimates that a minimum of 14 000 to 15 000 terrapins drown in crab traps annually set along the New Jersey coast alone 50 Countless more drown or starve to death in ghost traps abandoned or lost crab traps along with discarded nets throughout their habitat 51 Among two such abandoned crab pots in a tidal marsh in Georgia a study found 133 dead terrapins according to the Center for Biological Diversity 52 Further an increase in seawalls and bulkheads being built for storm and erosion control exacerbated by climate change and sea level rise inadvertently eliminate terrapin s nesting habitat on beaches and upland areas with soft shorelines 53 54 Due to these factors the diamondback terrapin is listed as an endangered species in Rhode Island a threatened species in Massachusetts and is considered a species of concern in Georgia Delaware Alabama Louisiana North Carolina and Virginia The diamondback terrapin is listed as a high priority species under the South Carolina Wildlife Action Plan In New Jersey it was recommended to be listed as a Species of Special Concern in 2001 In July 2016 the species was removed from the New Jersey game list and is now listed as non game with no hunting season In Connecticut there is no open hunting season for this animal However it holds no federal conservation status 55 In 2021 a terrapin was hatched in Massachusetts with two heads two gastrointestinal systems and two spines that are fused together 56 Conservation status Edit The species is classified as Vulnerable by the IUCN due to decreasing population numbers in most of its range 57 There is limited protection for terrapins on a state by state level throughout its range it is listed as Endangered in Rhode Island and Threatened in Massachusetts The Diamondback Terrapin Working Group 58 deal with regional protection issues There is no national protection except through the Lacey Act and little international protection citation needed Diamondback terrapins are the only U S turtles that inhabit the brackish waters of estuaries tidal creeks and salt marshes With a historic range stretching from Massachusetts to Texas terrapin populations have been severely depleted by land development and other human impacts along the Atlantic coast citation needed Earthwatch Institute a global non profit that teams volunteers with scientists to conduct important environmental research supports a research program called Tagging the Terrapins of the Jersey Shore This program allows volunteers to explore the coastal sprawl of New Jersey s Ocean County on Barnegat Bay one of the most extensive salt marsh ecosystems on the East Coast in search of this ornate turtle On this project volunteers contribute to environmental sustainability in the face of rampant development Veteran turtle scientists Dr Hal Avery Dr Jim Spotila Dr Walter Bien and Dr Ed Standora are overseeing this program and the viability of terrapin populations in the face of growing environmental change 59 Threats Edit The conservation status was heavily impacted by the consumption of diamondback terrapins in the 1900s when their sweet meat eventually became a multi million dollar industry for gourmet restaurants 48 Around the 1920s with the enforcement of prohibition the consumption of diamondback terrapins declined 48 Since then however the population has never fully recovered Another threat is shellfish and mussels cause exposure to paralytic shellfish toxins PST that are a result of harmful algal blooms that have been prominent along the coastline where diamondback terrapins reside 60 Gastrointestinal studies have identified the presence of ingested PST in their tissues which causes muscle weakness paralysis etc that eventually leads to death 60 The major threats to diamondback terrapins are all associated with humans and probably differ in different parts of their range People tend to build their cities on ocean coasts near the mouths of large rivers and in doing so they have destroyed many of the huge marshes that terrapins inhabited 61 Nationwide probably gt 75 of the salt marshes where terrapins lived have been destroyed or altered Currently ocean level rise threatens the remainder Traps used to catch crabs both commercially and privately have commonly caught and drowned many diamondback terrapins 26 which can result in male biased populations local population declines and even extinctions 27 62 When these traps are lost or abandoned ghost traps they can kill terrapins for many years Terrapin excluding devices are available to retrofit crab traps these reduce the number of terrapins captured while having little or no impact on crab capture rates 63 64 In some states NJ DE MD these devices are required by law Nests hatchlings and sometimes adults 65 are commonly eaten by raccoons foxes rats 32 66 67 and many species of birds especially crows and gulls 35 68 Density of these predators are often increased because of their association with humans Predation rates can be extremely high predation by raccoons on terrapin nests at Jamaica Bay Wildlife Refuge in New York varied from 92 to 100 each year from 1998 to 2008 32 Burke unpubl data Terrapins are killed by cars when nesting females cross roads 69 and mortality can be high enough to seriously affect populations 70 Terrapins are still harvested for food in some states Terrapins may be affected by pollutants such as metals and organic compounds 71 but this has not been demonstrated in wild populations There is an active casual and professional pet trade in terrapins and it is unknown how many are removed from the wild for this purpose Some people breed the species in captivity 72 and some color variants are considered especially desirable In Europe Malaclemys are widely kept as pets as are many closely related species Relationship with humans Edit University of Maryland s Testudo statue In Maryland diamondback terrapins were so plentiful in the 18th century that slaves protested the excessive use of this food source as their main protein Late in the 19th century demand for turtle soup claimed a harvest of 89 150 pounds from Chesapeake Bay in one year In 1899 terrapin was offered on the dinner menu of renowned Delmonico s Restaurant in New York City as its third most expensive item Either Maryland or Baltimore terrapin was available for 2 50 equivalent to 75 46 in 2018 Although demand was high over harvesting diminished capture to a mere 823 pounds by 1920 73 According to the FAA National Wildlife Strike Database a total of 18 strikes between diamondback terrapins and civil aircraft were reported in the US from 1990 to 2007 none of which caused damage to the aircraft 74 On July 8 2009 flights at John F Kennedy Airport in New York City were delayed for up to one and a half hours as 78 diamondback terrapins had invaded one of the runways The turtles which according to airport authorities were believed to have entered the runway in order to nest were removed and released back into the wild 75 A similar incident happened on June 29 2011 when over 150 turtles crossed runway 4 closing the runway and disrupting air traffic Those terrapins were also relocated safely 76 The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey installed a turtle barrier along runway 4L at JFK to reduce the number of terrapins on the runway and encourage them to nest elsewhere 77 Nevertheless on June 26 2014 86 terrapins made it onto the same runway as a high tide carried them over the barrier Their population is controlled by the raccoon population it has been shown that as the raccoons decrease in number mating terrapins increase leading to increased turtle activity at the airport 78 Many human activities threaten the safety of diamondback terrapins The terrapins get caught and drown in crab nets that humans put out are suffocated by pollution that humans greatly contribute to and lose their marsh and estuarine habitats because of urban development 79 History as a delicacy Edit Part of the pleasure of eating terrapin when the fashion was at its height however was its outre bizarre even monstrous essential nature Killing cleaning and preparing terrapin is not easy Paul Freedman 80 Diamondback terrapins were heavily harvested for food in colonial America and probably before that by Native Americans Terrapins were so abundant and easily obtained that slaves and even the Continental Army ate large numbers of them In the 19th century a dish called Terrapin a la Maryland a stew with cream and sherry was a canonical element along with canvasback duck of the elegant and regional Maryland Feast menu an elite standard that lasted for decades 80 By 1917 terrapins sold for as much as 5 each equivalent to 95 66 in 2017 66 Huge numbers of terrapins were harvested from marshes and marketed in cities By the early 1900s populations in the northern part of the range were severely depleted and the southern part was greatly reduced as well 81 As early as 1902 the U S Bureau of Fisheries which later became the U S Fish and Wildlife Service recognized that terrapin populations were declining and started building large research facilities centered at the Beaufort North Carolina Fisheries Laboratory to investigate methods for captive breeding terrapins for food 82 People tried unsuccessfully to establish them in many other locations including San Francisco 83 Use as a symbol Edit Maryland named the diamondback terrapin its official state reptile in 1994 The University of Maryland College Park has used the species as its nickname the Maryland Terrapins and mascot Testudo since 1933 and the school newspaper has been named The Diamondback since 1921 Accordingly the athletic teams are often known as Terps for short 84 The Baltimore baseball club entry in the Federal League during 1914 and 1915 was called the Baltimore Terrapins The terrapin has also been a symbol of the Grateful Dead upon the release of their studio album Terrapin Station as a result many images of the terrapin dancing with a tambourine appear on posters and t shirts in Grateful Dead memorabilia Inspired by the former song the Terrapin Beer Company also uses a terrapin as its namesake and logo on its packaging 85 References Edit Roosenburg W M Baker P J Burke R Dorcas M E Wood R C 2019 Malaclemys terrapin IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2019 e T12695A507698 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2019 1 RLTS T12695A507698 en Retrieved 12 November 2021 Appendices CITES cites org Retrieved 2022 01 14 a b c d e f g h Rhodin Anders G J van Dijk Peter Paul Inverson John B Shaffer H Bradley 2010 12 14 Turtles of the world 2010 update Annotated checklist of taxonomy synonymy distribution and conservation status PDF Chelonian Research Monographs 5 000 101 a b c d e Malaclemys terrapin SCHOEPFF 1793 The Reptile Database Fritz Uwe Peter Havas 2007 Checklist of Chelonians of the World PDF Vertebrate Zoology 57 2 190 192 Archived from the original PDF on 1 May 2011 Retrieved 29 May 2012 a b c Parham J F Outerbridge Monika E Stuart B L Wingate D B Erlenkeuser H Papenfuss T J 2008 Introduced delicacy or native species A natural origin of Bermudian terrapins supported by fossil and genetic data Biol Lett 4 2 216 219 doi 10 1098 rsbl 2007 0599 PMC 2429930 PMID 18270164 Seigel Richard A 1980 Nesting Habits of Diamondback Terrapin Malaclemys terrapin on the Atlantic Coast of Florida Transactions of the Kansas Academy of Science 83 4 239 246 doi 10 2307 3628414 JSTOR 3628414 a b Dictionary by Merriam Webster America s most trusted online dictionary Merriam webster com Retrieved 30 January 2022 Diamondback Terrapin National Aquarium Retrieved 2023 04 22 State of Connecticut Department of Environmental Protection Northern Diamondback Terrapin Malaclemys t terrapin PDF Archived from the original PDF on 10 June 2012 Retrieved 25 October 2011 Davenport John 1992 The Biology of the Diamondback Terrapin Malaclemys Terrapin Latreille Archived 2009 10 17 at the Wayback Machine Tetsudo 3 4 The Status and Demography of the Ornate Diamondback Terrapin Malaclemys terrapin macrospilota within the Saint Martins Marsh Aquatic Preserve PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2016 09 28 Retrieved 2012 04 04 Brennessel Barbara 2006 Diamonds in the marsh a natural history of the diamondback terrapin Barbara Brennessel Google Boeken ISBN 9781584655367 Retrieved 2013 04 22 Bentley P J Bretz W L Schmidt Nielsen K 1967 Osmoregulation in the diamondback terrapin Malaclemys terrapin cetrata Journal of Experimental Biology 46 1 161 167 doi 10 1242 jeb 46 1 161 PMID 6032170 Cowan F B M 1971 The ultrastructure of the lachrymal salt gland and the Harderian gland in the euryhaline Malaclemys and some closely related stenohaline emydids Canadian Journal of Zoology 49 5 691 697 doi 10 1139 z71 108 PMID 5557904 Cowan F B M 1981 Effects of salt loading in salt gland function in the euryhaline turtle Malaclemys terrapin Journal of Comparative Physiology 145 101 108 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 494 4703 doi 10 1007 bf00782600 S2CID 574410 a b Davenport J Macedo E A 1990 Behavioral osmotic control in the euryhaline diamondback terrapin Malaclemys terrapin responses to low salinity and rainfall Journal of Zoology 220 3 487 496 doi 10 1111 j 1469 7998 1990 tb04320 x Bels V L Davenport J Renous S 1995 Drinking and water expulsion in the diamondback terrapin Malaclemys terrapin Journal of Zoology London 236 483 497 doi 10 1111 j 1469 7998 1995 tb02726 x Tucker A D Fitzsimmons N N Gibbons J W 1995 Resource partitioning by the estuarine turtle Malaclemys terrapin trophic spatial and temporal foraging constraints Herpetologica 51 167 181 Conant 1975 Smith amp Brody 1982 Butler J A Seigel R A amp Mealey B K 2006 Malaclemys terrapin Diamondback Terrapin PDF Hart K M McIvor C C 2008 Demography and Ecology of Mangrove Diamondback Terrapins in a Wilderness Area of Everglades National Park Florida USA Copeia 2008 200 208 doi 10 1643 ce 06 161 S2CID 84316908 Kinneary J J 1993 Salinity relations of Chelydra serpentina in a Long Island estuary Journal of Herpetology 27 4 441 446 doi 10 2307 1564834 JSTOR 1564834 Coker R E 1906 The natural history and cultivation of the diamond back terrapin with notes of other forms of turtles North Carolina Geological Survey Bulletin 14 1 67 a b c Gibbons J W Lovich J E Tucker A D Fitzsimmons N N Greene J L 2001 Demographic and ecological factors affecting conservation and management of diamondback terrapins Malaclemys terrapin in South Carolina Chelonian Conservation and Biology 4 66 74 a b Tucker A D Gibbons J W Greene J L 2001 Estimates of adult survival and migration for diamondback terrapins conservation insight from local extirpation within a metapopulation Canadian Journal of Zoology 79 12 2199 2209 doi 10 1139 z01 185 Hauswaldt J S Glen T C 2005 Population genetics of the diamondback terrapin Malaclemys terrapin Molecular Ecology 14 3 723 732 doi 10 1111 j 1365 294x 2005 02451 x PMID 15723664 S2CID 1897746 Brennessel Barbara Diamonds in the Marsh Hanover University Press of New England 2006 Seigel R A 1980 Courtship and mating behavior of the diamondback terrapin Malaclemys terrapin tequesta Journal of Herpetology 14 4 420 421 doi 10 2307 1563703 JSTOR 1563703 Barney R L 1922 Further notes on the natural history and artificial propagation of the diamondback terrapin U S Bureau of Fisheries Economic Circular No 5 rev 91 111 a b c d e Feinberg J A Burke Russell L 2003 Nesting ecology and predation of diamondback terrapins Malaclemys terrapin at Gateway National Recreation Area New York Journal of Herpetology 37 3 517 526 doi 10 1670 207 02a S2CID 59038338 Hildebrand S F 1928 Review of the experiments on artificial culture of the diamond back terrapin Bulletin of the United States Bureau of Fisheries 45 25 70 Roosenburg W M 1994 Nesting habitat requirements of the diamondback terrapin a geographic comparison Wetland Journal 6 9 12 a b c Butler J A Broadhurst C Green M Mullin Z 2004 Nesting nest predation and hatchling emergence of the Carolina diamondback terrapin Malaclemys terrapin centrata in Northeastern Florida American Midland Naturalist 152 145 155 doi 10 1674 0003 0031 2004 152 0145 nnpahe 2 0 co 2 S2CID 86042069 Baldwin J D L A Latino B K Mealey G M Parks and M R J Forstner 2005 The diamondback terrapin in Florida Bay and the Florida Keys Insights into Turtle Conservation and Ecology Chapter 20 In In W E Meshaka Jr and K J Babbitt eds Amphibians and Reptiles status and conservation in Florida Krieger Publishing Company Malabar Florida a b Baker P J Costanzo J P Herlands R Wood R C Lee R E Jr 2006 Inoculative freezing promotes winter survival in hatchling diamondback terrapin Malaclemys terrapin Canadian Journal of Zoology 84 116 124 doi 10 1139 z05 183 Pilter R 1985 Malaclemys terrapin terrapin Northern diamondback terrapin Behavior Herpetological Review 16 82 Hildebrand S F 1932 Growth of diamond back terrapins size attained sex ratio and longevity Zoologica 9 231 238 Yearicks E F Wood R C Johnson W S 1981 Hibernation of the northern diamondback terrapin Malaclemys terrapin terrapin Estuaries 4 1 78 80 doi 10 2307 1351546 JSTOR 1351546 S2CID 84411783 Diamondback Terrapin Care Sheet Freshwater Pet Terrapin Care Guide Tortoisetown com a b c Diamondback Terrapin Archived from the original on 2012 04 23 Diamondback Terrapin North Carolina Wildlife Profiles PDF Ncwildlife org Retrieved 30 January 2022 Diamondback Terrapin Care Blogs thatpetplace com 12 August 2014 Diamondback Terrapin Chesapeake Bay Program Chesapeakebay net Retrieved 30 January 2022 25 Years of Terrapin Conservation and Research Wetlandsinstitute org Retrieved 30 January 2022 Foraging ecology and habitat use of the northern diamondback terrapin Malaclemys terrapin terrapin in southern Chesapeake Bay PDF Dtwg com Retrieved 30 January 2022 a b c Hart K M Lee D S 2006 The diamondback terrapin The biology ecology cultural history and conservation status of an obligate estuarine turtle Studies in Avian Biology 32 206 213 Miller Matthew L 2018 03 27 Saving Terrapins From Drowning in Crab Traps Cool Green Science Retrieved 2021 03 26 Terrapins and Traps The Wetlands Institute Wetlandsinstitute org Retrieved 2021 03 26 Kim Josh 2019 11 27 Ghost pots imperil terrapins Ocean City Today Archived from the original on 2022 04 09 Retrieved 2021 03 26 Bennett Elise 2020 02 05 International Turtle Experts Urge Florida to Protect Diamondback Terrapins From Drowning in Crab Pots Center for Biological Diversity Archived from the original on 2021 03 07 Retrieved 2021 03 26 Witherington Blair Hirama Shigetomo Mosier Andrea 2011 05 31 Sea turtle responses to barriers on their nesting beach Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology 401 1 2 1 6 doi 10 1016 j jembe 2011 03 012 ISSN 0022 0981 Enhancing nesting habitat for northern diamondback terrapins in New Jersey Turtle Gardens Great Bay Terrapin Project Wildlife Conservation Conserve Wildlife Foundation of New Jersey Conservewildlifenj org Retrieved 2021 03 26 ECOS Species Profile ecos fws gov Retrieved 2022 11 07 A rare two headed turtle is alive and thriving surprising scientists Popular Science 2021 10 14 Retrieved 2021 10 17 Roosenburg W M Baker P J Burke R Dorcas M E Wood R C 2019 Malaclemys terrapin IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2019 e T12695A507698 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2019 1 RLTS T12695A507698 en Retrieved 12 November2021 Home Dtwg com Retrieved 30 January 2022 Earthwatch Tagging the Terrapins of the Jersey Shore Earthwatch org Retrieved 30 January 2022 a b Hattenrath Lehmann T K Ossiboff R J Burnell C A Rauschenberg C D Hynes K Burke R L Bunting E M Durham K Gobler C J 2017 The role of a PSP producing Alexandrium bloom in an unprecedented diamondback terrapin Malaclemys terrapin mortality event in Flanders Bay New York USA Toxicon 129 36 43 doi 10 1016 j toxicon 2017 02 006 PMID 28209476 S2CID 26225689 Ner S and R L Burke 2008 Direct and indirect effects of urbanization on Diamondback terrapins of New York City Distribution and predation of terrapin nests in a human modified estuary J C Mitchell R E Jung and B Bartholomew eds Pp 107 117 In Urban Herpetology Herpetological Conservation Vol 3 Society for the Study of Amphibians and Reptiles Dorcas M E Wilson J D Gibbons J W 2007 Crab trapping causes population decline and demographic changes in diamondback terrapins over two decades Biological Conservation 137 3 334 340 doi 10 1016 j biocon 2007 02 014 Guillory V Prejean P 1998 Effect of a terrapin excluder device on blue crab Callinectes sapidus trap catches Marine Fisheries Review 60 38 40 Roosenburg W M and J P Green 2000 Impact of a bycatch reduction device on diamondback terrapin and blue crab capture in crab pots Ecological Applications 10 882 889 Seigel R A 1980 Predation by raccoons on diamondback terrapins Malaclemys terrapin tequesta Journal of Herpetology 14 1 87 89 doi 10 2307 1563885 JSTOR 1563885 a b Hay W P 1917 Artificial Propagation of the diamondback terrapin Department of Commerce Bureau of Fisheries Economic Circular No 5 revised Pages 3 21 Draud M Bossert M Zimnavoda S 2004 Predation on hatchling and juvenile diamondback terrapins Malaclemys terrapin by the Norway rat Rattus norvegicus Journal of Herpetology 38 3 467 470 doi 10 1670 29 04n S2CID 85682505 Burger J 1977 Determinants of hatching success in diamondback terrapin Malaclemys terrapin American Midland Naturalist 97 2 444 464 doi 10 2307 2425108 JSTOR 2425108 Szerlag S McRobert S P 2006 Road occurrence and mortality of the northern diamondback terrapin Applied Herpetology 3 27 37 doi 10 1163 157075406775247058 Avissar N G 2006 Changes in population structure of diamondback terrapins Malaclemys terrapin terrapin in a previously surveyed creek in southern New Jersey Chelonian Conservation and Biology 5 154 159 doi 10 2744 1071 8443 2006 5 154 cipsod 2 0 co 2 S2CID 85345195 Holliday D K Elskus A A Roosenburg W M 2009 Impacts of multiple stressors on growth and metabolic rate of Malaclemys terrapin Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry 28 2 338 345 doi 10 1897 08 145 1 PMID 18788897 S2CID 12542492 Szymanski S 2005 Experience with the raising keeping and breeding of the diamondback terrapin Malaclemys terrapin macrospilota Radiata 14 3 12 Turtletrack org Archived from the original on 2003 02 12 Retrieved 2007 03 31 Archived copy PDF wildlife pr erau edu Archived from the original PDF on 28 August 2008 Retrieved 30 June 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Turtles Delay Flights at JFK at the New York Post website Mating turtles shut down runway at JFK at CNN com Prendergast Daniel 15 June 2013 Shell of a save JFK barriers to block runway turtles New York Post Retrieved 15 June 2013 Schweber Nate 3 July 2014 Studying What Lures Turtles to a Tarmac at Kennedy Airport The New York Times Retrieved 11 February 2019 Conant Therese Diamondback Terrapin PDF Division of Conservation Education N C Wildlife Resources Commission retrieved October 20 2011 a b Paul Freedman Terrapin Monster p 51 64 of Dina Khapaeva ed Man Eating Monsters Anthropocentrism and Popular Culture ISBN 9781787695283 p 59 Coker R E 1931 The diamondback terrapin in North Carolina In ed H F Taylor Survey of Marine Fisheries of North Carolina University of North Carolina Press Chapel Hill NC pp 219 230 Wolfe Douglas A 2000 A History of the Federal Biological Laboratory at Beaufort North Carolina 1899 1999 Brown P R 1971 The story of California diamondbacks Herpetology 5 37 38 Maryland state reptile diamondback terrapin Maryland manual on line a guide to Maryland government Maryland State Archives March 8 2010 Retrieved January 21 2011 Ogletree Owen 2007 An interview with the owners of Terrapin Beer Company Athens Georgia Classiccitybrew com Retrieved 2020 12 16 Bibliography EditConant Roger 1975 A Field Guide to Reptiles and Amphibians of Eastern and Central North America 2nd ed Boston Houghton Mifflin Smith Hobart Muir Brody E D 1982 Reptiles of North America A Guide to Field Identification New York Golden Press External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Diamondback terrapin Jonathan s Diamondback Terrapin World Malaclemys Gallery Species Malaclemys terrapin at The Reptile Database Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Diamondback terrapin amp oldid 1153434369, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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