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Painted turtle

The painted turtle (Chrysemys picta) is the most widespread native turtle of North America. It lives in relatively slow-moving fresh waters, from southern Canada to northern Mexico, and from the Atlantic to the Pacific. They have been shown to prefer large wetlands with long periods of inundation and emergent vegetation.[7] This species is one of the few that is specially adapted to tolerate freezing temperatures for extended periods of time due to an antifreeze-like substance in their blood that keeps their cells from freezing.[8] This turtle is a member of the genus Chrysemys, which is part of the pond turtle family Emydidae. Fossils show that the painted turtle existed 15 million years ago. Three regionally based subspecies (the eastern, midland, and western) evolved during the last ice age. The southern painted turtle (C. dorsalis) is alternately considered the only other species in Chrysemys, or another subspecies of C. picta.

Painted turtle
Temporal range: 15–0 Ma Neogenerecent[1]
Western painted turtle
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Reptilia
Order: Testudines
Suborder: Cryptodira
Superfamily: Testudinoidea
Family: Emydidae
Subfamily: Deirochelyinae
Genus: Chrysemys
Species:
C. picta
Binomial name
Chrysemys picta
(Schneider, 1783)
Subspecies[3]

C. p. bellii[3]
C. p. marginata[3]
C. p. picta[3]

Yellow: Eastern (C. p. picta)

Orange: Midland (C. p. marginata)
Blue: Southern (C. dorsalis)
Red: Western (C. p. bellii)

Synonyms[6]
Species synonymy[4]
  • Testudo picta
    Schneider, 1783
  • Chrysemys cinerea
    Bonnaterre, 1789
  • Emys bellii
    Gray, 1831
  • Emys oregoniensis
    Harlan, 1837
  • Chrysemys picta
    Gray, 1856
  • Chrysemys marginata
    Agassiz, 1857
  • Chrysemys dorsalis
    Agassiz, 1857
  • Chrysemys nuttalli
    Agassiz, 1857
  • Chrysemys pulchra
    Gray, 1873
  • Chrysemys trealeasei
    Hurter, 1911
Subspecies synonymy[4][5]
Chrysemys picta picta
  • Testudo picta Schneider, 1783
  • Testudo cinerea Bonnaterre, 1789
  • Emys cinerea Schweigger, 1812
  • Emys picta Schweigger, 1812
  • Clemmys picta Wagler, 1830
  • Terrapene picta Bonaparte, 1831
  • Chrysemys picta Gray, 1856
  • Chrysemys cinerea Boulenger, 1889
  • Clemmys cinerea Strauch, 1890
  • Chrysemys [cinerea] cinerea Siebenrock, 1909
  • Chrysemis picta Kallert, 1927
  • Chrysemys picta picta Bishop & Schmidt, 1931
  • Chrysema picta Chan & Cohen, 1964
  • Pseudemys picta Arnold, 2002
Chrysemys picta bellii
  • Emys bellii Gray, 1831
  • Clemmys (Clemmys) bellii Fitzinger, 1835
  • Emys oregoniensis Harlan, 1837
  • Chrysemys bellii Gray, 1844
  • Emys originensis Gray, 1844 (ex errore)
  • Emys oregonensis LeConte, 1854 (ex errore)
  • Emys origonensis Gray, 1856 (ex errore)
  • Chrysemys nuttalii Agassiz, 1857
  • Chrysemys oregonensis Agassiz, 1857
  • Clemmys oregoniensis Strauch, 1862
  • Chrysemys nuttallii Gray, 1863 (ex errore)
  • Chrysemys orbigniensis Gray, 1863
  • Chrysemys pulchra Gray, 1873
  • Emys belli Günther, 1874 (ex errore)
  • Chrysemys cinerea var. bellii Boulenger, 1889
  • Chrysemys belli Ditmars, 1907
  • Chrysemys treleasei Hurter, 1911
  • Chrysemys marginata bellii Stejneger & Barbour, 1917
  • Chrysemys bellii bellii Ruthven, 1924
  • Chrysemys picta bellii Bishop & Schmidt, 1931
  • Chrysemys picta belli Mertens, Müller & Rust, 1934
  • Chrysemys belli belli Pickwell, 1948
  • Chrysemys nuttalli Schmidt, 1953 (ex errore)
  • Chrysemys picta bollii Kuhn, 1964 (ex errore)
  • Chrysemys trealeasei Ernst, 1971 (ex errore)
  • Chrysemys trealeasi Smith & Smith, 1980 (ex errore)
Chrysemys picta dorsalis
  • Chrysemys dorsalis Agassiz, 1857
  • Clemmys picta var. dorsalis Strauch, 1862
  • Chrysemys cinerea var. dorsalis Boulenger, 1889
  • Chrysemys marginata dorsalis Stejneger & Barbour, 1917
  • Chrysemys bellii dorsalis Ruthven, 1924
  • Chrysemys picta dorsalis Bishop & Schmidt, 1931
Chrysemys picta marginata
  • Chrysemys marginata Agassiz, 1857
  • Clemmys marginata Strauch, 1862
  • Chrysemys marginata marginata Stejneger & Barbour, 1917
  • Chrysemys bellii marginata Ruthven, 1924
  • Chrysemys picta marginata Bishop & Schmidt, 1931

The adult painted turtle is 13–25 cm (5–10 in) long; the male is smaller than the female. The turtle's top shell is dark and smooth, without a ridge. Its skin is olive to black with red, orange, or yellow stripes on its extremities. The subspecies can be distinguished by their shells: the eastern has straight-aligned top shell segments; the midland has a large gray mark on the bottom shell; the western has a red pattern on the bottom shell.

The turtle eats aquatic vegetation, algae, and small water creatures including insects, crustaceans, and fish. Painted turtles primarily feed while in water and are able to locate and subdue prey even in heavily clouded conditions.[9] Although they are frequently consumed as eggs or hatchlings by rodents, canines, and snakes, the adult turtles' hard shells protect them from most predators. Reliant on warmth from its surroundings, the painted turtle is active only during the day when it basks for hours on logs or rocks. During winter, the turtle hibernates, usually in the mud at the bottom of water bodies. The turtles mate in spring and autumn. Females dig nests on land and lay eggs between late spring and mid-summer. Hatched turtles grow until sexual maturity: 2–9 years for males, 6–16 for females.

In the traditional tales of Algonquian tribes, the colorful turtle played the part of a trickster. In modern times, four U.S. states (Colorado, Illinois, Michigan, and Vermont) have named the painted turtle their official reptile. While habitat loss and road killings have reduced the turtle's population, its ability to live in human-disturbed settings has helped it remain the most abundant turtle in North America. Adults in the wild can live for more than 55 years.

Taxonomy and evolution edit

 
German naturalist Johann Gottlob Schneider first categorized the painted turtle

The painted turtle (C. picta) is the only species in the genus Chrysemys.[5] The parent family for Chrysemys is Emydidae: the pond turtles. Emydidae is split into two sub families; Chrysemys is part of the Deirochelyinae (Western Hemisphere) branch.[10] The four subspecies of the painted turtle are the eastern (C. p. picta), midland (C. p. marginata), southern (C. p. dorsalis), and western (C. p. bellii).[11]

The painted turtle's generic name is derived from the Ancient Greek words for "gold" (chryso) and "freshwater tortoise" (emys); the species name originates from the Latin for "colored" (pictus).[12] The subspecies name, marginata, derives from the Latin for "border" and refers to the red markings on the outer (marginal) part of the upper shell; dorsalis is from the Latin for "back", referring to the prominent dorsal stripe; and bellii honors English zoologist Thomas Bell, a collaborator of Charles Darwin.[13][14] An alternate East Coast common name for the painted turtle is "skilpot", from the Dutch for turtle, schildpad.[15]

Classification edit

Originally described in 1783 by Johann Gottlob Schneider as Testudo picta,[5][16] the painted turtle was called Chrysemys picta first by John Edward Gray in 1855. Four subspecies were then recognized: the eastern by Schneider in 1783,[16][17] the western by Gray in 1831,[17][18] and the midland and southern by Louis Agassiz in 1857, though the southern painted turtle is now generally considered a full species.[19][20][21]

Subspecies edit

Although the subspecies of painted turtle intergrade (blend together) at range boundaries[22] they are distinct within the hearts of their ranges.[23]

  • The male eastern painted turtle (C. p. picta) is 13–17 cm (5–7 in) long, while the female is 14–17 cm (6–7 in). The upper shell is olive green to black and may possess a pale stripe down the middle and red markings on the periphery. The segments (scutes) of the top shell have pale leading edges and occur in straight rows across the back, unlike all other North American turtles, including the other three subspecies of painted turtle, which have alternating segments.[23] The bottom shell is plain yellow or lightly spotted. Sometimes as few as one dark grey spot near the lower center of the shell.[24]
  • The midland painted turtle (C. p. marginata) is 10–25 cm (4–10 in) long.[25] The centrally located midland is the hardest to distinguish from the other three subspecies.[23] Its bottom shell has a characteristic symmetrical dark shadow in the center which varies in size and prominence.[26]
  • The largest subspecies is the western painted turtle (C. p. bellii), which grows up to 26.6 cm (10 in) long.[27][28] Its top shell has a mesh-like pattern of light lines,[29] and the top stripe present in other subspecies is missing or faint. Its bottom shell has a large colored splotch that spreads to the edges (further than the midland) and often has red hues.[29]
Eastern painted turtle
C. p. picta
Midland painted turtle
C. p. marginata
Western painted turtle
C. p. bellii
     
     

Until the 1930s, many of the subspecies of the painted turtle were labeled by biologists as full species within Chrysemys, but this varied by the researcher. The painted turtles in the border region between the western and midland subspecies were sometimes considered a full species, treleasei. In 1931, Bishop and Schmidt defined the current "four in one" taxonomy of species and subspecies. Based on comparative measurements of turtles from throughout the range, they subordinated species to subspecies and eliminated treleasei.[30]

Since at least 1958,[31][nb 1] the subspecies were thought to have evolved in response to geographic isolation during the last ice age, 100,000 to 11,000 years ago.[29] At that time painted turtles were divided into three different populations: eastern painted turtles along the southeastern Atlantic coast; southern painted turtles around the southern Mississippi River; and western painted turtles in the southwestern United States.[26] The populations were not completely isolated for sufficiently long, hence wholly different species never evolved. When the glaciers retreated, about 11,000 years ago, all three subspecies moved north. The western and southern subspecies met in Missouri and hybridized to produce the midland painted turtle, which then moved east and north through the Ohio and Tennessee river basins.[31][26]

Biologists have long debated the genera of closely related subfamily-mates Chrysemys, Pseudemys (cooters), and Trachemys (sliders). After 1952, some combined Pseudemys and Chrysemys because of similar appearance.[32] In 1964, based on measurements of the skull and feet, Samuel B. McDowell proposed all three genera be merged into one. However, further measurements, in 1967, contradicted this taxonomic arrangement. Also in 1967, J. Alan Holman,[33] a paleontologist and herpetologist, pointed out that, although the three turtles were often found together in nature and had similar mating patterns, they did not crossbreed. In the 1980s, studies of turtles' cell structures, biochemistries, and parasites further indicated that Chrysemys, Pseudemys, and Trachemys should remain in separate genera.[34]

In 2003, Starkey et al. proposed that Chrysemys dorsalis, formerly considered a subspecies of C. picta, to be a distinct species sister to all subspecies in C. picta. Although this proposal was largely unrecognized at the time due to evidence of hybridization between dorsalis and picta, the Turtle Taxonomy Working Group and the Reptile Database have since followed through with it, although both the subspecific and specific names have been recognized.[17][35][21]

Fossils edit

 
Top and bottom shell fossils, about 5 million years old, from a Tennessee sinkhole[36]

Although its evolutionary history—what the forerunner to the species was and how the close relatives branched off—is not well understood, the painted turtle is common in the fossil record.[37] The oldest samples, found in Nebraska, date to about 15 million years ago. Fossils from 15 million to about 5 million years ago are restricted to the Nebraska-Kansas area, but more recent fossils are gradually more widely distributed. Fossils newer than 300,000 years old are found in almost all the United States and southern Canada.[1]

DNA edit

The turtle's karyotype (nuclear DNA, rather than mitochondrial DNA) consists of 50 chromosomes, the same number as the rest of its subfamily-mates and the most common number for Emydidae turtles in general.[38][39][40] Less well-related turtles have from 26 to 66 chromosomes.[41] Little systematic study of variations of the painted turtle's karotype among populations has been done.[42] (However, in 1967, research on protein structure of offshore island populations in New England, showed differences from mainland turtles.)[43]

Comparison of subspecies chromosomal DNA has been discussed, to help address the debate over Starkey's proposed taxonomy, but as of 2009 had not been reported.[42][44] The complete sequencing of the genetic code for the painted turtle was at a "draft assembled" state in 2010. The turtle was one of two reptiles chosen to be first sequenced.[45]

Description edit

 
Painted turtle's yellow face-stripes, philtrum (nasal groove), and foot webbing

Adult painted turtles can grow to 13–25 cm (5–10 in) long, with males being smaller. The shell is oval, smooth with little grooves where the large scale-like plates overlap, and flat-bottomed.[46][nb 2][47][38] The color of the top shell (carapace) varies from olive to black. Darker specimens are more common where the bottom of the water body is darker. The bottom shell (plastron) is yellow, sometimes red, sometimes with dark markings in the center. Similar to the top shell, the turtle's skin is olive to black, but with red and yellow stripes on its neck, legs, and tail.[48][49] As with other pond turtles, such as the bog turtle, the painted turtle's feet are webbed to aid swimming.[50][51][52]

The head of the turtle is distinctive. The face has only yellow stripes, with a large yellow spot and streak behind each eye, and on the chin two wide yellow stripes that meet at the tip of the jaw.[46][38][48] The turtle's upper jaw is shaped into an inverted "V" (philtrum), with a downward-facing, tooth-like projection on each side.[53]

The hatchling has a proportionally larger head, eyes, and tail, and a more circular shell than the adult.[54][55] The adult female is generally longer than the male, 10–25 cm (4–10 in) versus 7–15 cm (3–6 in).[48][56] For a given length, the female has a higher (more rounded, less flat) top shell.[57] The female weighs around 500 g (18 oz) on average, against the males' average adult weight of roughly 300 g (11 oz).[58] The female's greater body volume supports her egg-production.[59] The male has longer foreclaws and a longer, thicker tail, with the anus (cloaca) located further out on the tail.[46][47][38][60]

Similar species edit

The painted turtle has a very similar appearance to the red-eared slider (the most common pet turtle) and the two are often confused. The painted turtle can be distinguished because it is flatter than the slider. Also, the slider has a prominent red marking on the side of its head (the "ear") and a spotted bottom shell, both features missing in the painted turtle.[61]

Painted turtle Red-eared slider
   

Distribution edit

Range edit

The most widespread North American turtle,[62] the painted turtle is the only turtle whose native range extends from the Atlantic to the Pacific.[nb 3] It is native to eight of Canada's ten provinces, forty-five of the fifty United States, and one of Mexico's thirty-one states. On the East Coast, it lives from the Canadian Maritimes to the U.S. state of Georgia. On the West Coast, it lives in British Columbia, Washington, and Oregon and offshore on southeast Vancouver Island.[nb 4] The northernmost American turtle,[63] its range includes much of southern Canada. To the south, its range reaches the U.S. Gulf Coast in Louisiana and Alabama. In the southwestern United States there are only dispersed populations. It is found in one river in extreme northern Mexico. It is absent in a part of southwestern Virginia and the adjacent states as well as in north-central Alabama.[29][64][65]

 
Native range of the painted turtle (C. picta)
Dark grey for national borders
White for state and province borders
Dark blue for rivers, only showing those in article
  Eastern (C. p. picta)
  Midland (C. p. marginata)
  Southern (C. dorsalis)
  Western (C. p. bellii)
Intergrade mixtures (large areas only)
  Mix of eastern and midland
  Mix of eastern and southern
  Mix of midland and western

The borders between the four subspecies are not sharp, because the subspecies interbreed. Many studies have been performed in the border regions to assess the intermediate turtles, usually by comparing the anatomical features of hybrids that result from intergradation of the classical subspecies.[nb 5] Despite the imprecision, the subspecies are assigned nominal ranges.

Eastern painted turtle edit

 
Eastern painted turtle in Massachusetts

The eastern painted turtle ranges from southeastern Canada to Georgia with a western boundary at approximately the Appalachians. At its northern extremes, the turtle tends to be restricted to the warmer areas closer to the Atlantic Ocean. It is uncommon in far north New Hampshire and in Maine is common only in a strip about 50 miles from the coast.[70][71] In Canada, it lives in New Brunswick and Nova Scotia but not in Quebec or Prince Edward Island. To the south it is not found in the coastal lowlands of southern North Carolina, South Carolina, or Georgia, or in southern Georgia in general or at all in Florida.[29][64][72][73]

In the northeast, there is extensive mixing with the midland subspecies, and some writers have called these turtles a "hybrid swarm".[31][74][75] In the southeast, the border between the eastern and midland is more sharp as mountain chains separate the subspecies to different drainage basins.[64][76]

Midland painted turtle edit

The midland painted turtle lives from southern Ontario and Quebec, through the eastern U.S. Midwest states, to Kentucky, Tennessee and northwestern Alabama, where it intergrades with the southern painted turtle.[77] It also is found eastward through West Virginia, western Maryland and Pennsylvania. The midland painted turtle appears to be moving east, especially in Pennsylvania.[78] To the northeast it is found in western New York and much of Vermont, and it intergrades extensively with the eastern subspecies.[79][64]

Western painted turtle edit

 
Western painted turtle (watercolor by Gordon)

The western painted turtle's northern range includes southern parts of western Canada from Ontario through Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta and British Columbia. In Ontario, the western subspecies is found north of Minnesota and directly north of Lake Superior, but there is a 130 km (80 mi) gap to the east of Lake Superior (in the area of harshest winter climate) where no painted turtles of any subspecies occur. Thus Ontario's western subspecies does not intergrade with the midland painted turtle of southeastern Ontario.[67] In Manitoba, the turtle is numerous and ranges north to Lake Manitoba and the lower part of Lake Winnipeg. The turtle is also common in south Saskatchewan,[80] but in Alberta, there may only be 100 individuals, all found very near the U.S. border, mostly in the southeast.[29][64][81][82]

 
Western painted turtle in Oregon

In British Columbia, populations exist in the interior in the vicinity of the Kootenai, Columbia, Okanagan, and Thompson river valleys. At the coast, turtles occur near the mouth of the Fraser and a bit further north, as well as the bottom of Vancouver Island, and some other nearby islands. Within British Columbia, the turtle's range is not continuous and can better be understood as northward extensions of the range from the United States. High mountains present barriers to east–west movement of the turtles within the province or from Alberta. Some literature has shown isolated populations much further north in British Columbia and Alberta, but these were probably pet-releases.[29][64][81][82]

In the United States, the western subspecies forms a wide intergrade area with the midland subspecies covering much of Illinois as well as a strip of Wisconsin along Lake Michigan and part of the Upper Peninsula of Michigan (UP). Further west, the rest of Illinois, Wisconsin and the UP are part of the range proper, as are all of Minnesota and Iowa, as well as all of Missouri except a narrow strip in the south. All of North Dakota is within range, all of South Dakota except a very small area in the west, and all of Nebraska. Almost all of Kansas is in range; the border of that state with Oklahoma is roughly the species range border, but the turtle is found in three counties of north central Oklahoma.[29][64][83][81]

To the northwest, almost all of Montana is in range. Only a narrow strip in the west, along most of the Idaho border (which is at the Continental Divide) lacks turtles.[84] Wyoming is almost entirely out of range; only the lower elevation areas near the eastern and northern borders have painted turtles.[85] In Idaho, the turtles are found throughout the far north (upper half of the Idaho Panhandle). Recently, separate Idaho populations have been observed in the southwest (near the Payette and Boise rivers) and the southeast (near St. Anthony).[86] In Washington state, turtles are common throughout the state within lower elevation river valleys.[87] In Oregon, the turtle is native to the northern part of the state throughout the Columbia River Valley as well as the Willamette River Valley north of Salem.[29][81][88]

To the southwest, the painted turtle's range is fragmented. In Colorado, while range is continuous in the eastern, prairie, half of the state, it is absent in most of the western, mountainous, part of the state. However, the turtle is confirmed present in the lower elevation southwest part of the state (Archuleta and La Plata counties), where a population ranges into northern New Mexico in the San Juan River basin.[89] In New Mexico, the main distribution follows the Rio Grande and the Pecos River, two waterways that run in a north–south direction through the state.[90] Within the aforementioned rivers, it is also found in the northern part of Far West Texas.[91] In Utah, the painted turtle lives in an area to the south (Kane County) in streams draining into the Colorado River, although it is disputed if they are native.[81][92][93] In Arizona, the painted turtle is native to an area in the east, Lyman Lake.[94][95] The painted turtle is not native to Nevada or California.[29][81]

In Mexico,[90] painted turtles have been found about 50 miles south of New Mexico near Galeana in the state of Chihuahua. There, two expeditions[96][97] found the turtles in the Rio Santa Maria which is in a closed basin.[29][81]

Human-introduced range edit

Pet releases are starting to establish the painted turtle outside its native range. It has been introduced into waterways near Phoenix, Arizona,[94] and to Germany, Indonesia, the Philippines, and Spain.[3]

Habitat edit

 
Painted turtle habitat in New Hampshire

To thrive, painted turtles need fresh waters with soft bottoms, basking sites, and aquatic vegetation. They find their homes in shallow waters with slow-moving currents, such as creeks, marshes, ponds, and the shores of lakes. The subspecies have evolved different habitat preferences.[98]

  • The eastern painted turtle is very aquatic, leaving the immediate vicinity of its water body only when forced by drought to migrate.[99] Along the Atlantic, painted turtles have appeared in brackish waters. They can be found in wetland areas like swamps and marshes with a thick layer of mud as well as sandy bottoms with lots of vegetation.[100] [98]
  • The midland and southern painted turtles seek especially quiet waters, usually shores and coves. They favor shallows that contain dense vegetation and have an unusual toleration of pollution.[101][102]
  • The western painted turtle lives in streams and lakes, similar to the other painted turtles, but also inhabits pasture ponds and roadside pools. It is found as high as 1,800 m (5,900 ft).[27]

Population features edit

 
Shell marking code

Within much of its range, the painted turtle is the most abundant turtle species. Population densities range from 10 to 840 turtles per hectare (2.5 acres) of water surface. Warmer climates produce higher relative densities among populations, and habitat desirability also influences density. Rivers and large lakes have lower densities because only the shore is desirable habitat; the central, deep waters skew the surface-based estimates. Also, lake and river turtles have to make longer linear trips to access equivalent amounts of foraging space.[103]

Adults outnumber juveniles in most populations, but gauging the ratios is difficult because juveniles are harder to catch; with current sampling methods, estimates of age distribution vary widely.[104] Annual survival rate of painted turtles increases with age. The probability of a painted turtle surviving from the egg to its first birthday is only 19%. For females, the annual survival rate rises to 45% for juveniles and 95% for adults. The male survival rates follow a similar pattern, but are probably lower overall than females, as evidenced by the average male age being lower than that of the female.[105] Natural disasters can confound age distributions. For instance, a hurricane can destroy many nests in a region, resulting in fewer hatchlings the next year.[105] Age distributions may also be skewed by migrations of adults.[104]

To understand painted turtle adult age distributions, researchers require reliable methods.[106] Turtles younger than four years (up to 12 years in some populations) can be aged based on "growth rings" in their shells.[107] For older turtles, some attempts have been made to determine age based on size and shape of their shells or legs using mathematical models, but this method is more uncertain.[107][108] The most reliable method to study the long-lived turtles is to capture them, permanently mark their shells by notching with a drill, release the turtles, and then recapture them in later years.[109][110] The longest-running study, in Michigan, has shown that painted turtles can live more than 55 years.[107][111]

Adult sex ratios of painted turtle populations average around 1:1.[112] Many populations are slightly male-heavy, but some are strongly female-imbalanced; one population in Ontario has a female to male ratio of 4:1.[113] Hatchling sex ratio varies based on egg temperature. During the middle third of incubation, temperatures of 23–27 °C (73–81 °F) produce males, and anything above or below that, females.[114] It does not appear that females choose nesting sites to influence the sex of the hatchlings;[54] within a population, nests will vary sufficiently to give both male and female-heavy broods.[104]

Ecology edit

Diet edit

The painted turtle is a bottom-dwelling hunter. It quickly juts its head into and out of vegetation to stir potential victims out into the open water, where they are pursued. Large prey is ripped apart with the forefeet as the turtle holds it in its mouth. It also consumes plants and skims the surface of the water with its mouth open to catch small particles of food.[115]

Although all subspecies of painted turtle eat both plants and animals (in the form of leaves, algae, fish, crustaceans, aquatic insects and carrion), their specific diets vary.[116][117][118] Young painted turtles are mostly carnivorous and as they mature they become more herbivorous.[119]

Painted turtles obtain coloration from carotenoids in their natural diet by eating algae and a variety of aquatic plants from their environment. Stripes and spots increase red and yellow chroma and decrease UV chroma and brightness in turtles with large amounts of carotenoids in their diet compared to the stripes and spots of turtles with only moderate amounts of carotenoids in their diet.[120]

  • The eastern painted turtle's diet is the least studied. It prefers to eat in the water, but has been observed eating on land. The fish it consumes are typically dead or injured. [118]
  • The midland painted turtle eats mostly aquatic insects and both vascular and non-vascular plants.[121]
  • The western painted turtle's consumption of plants and animals changes seasonally. In early summer, 60% of its diet comprises insects. In late summer, 55% includes plants.[122] Of note, the western painted turtle aids in the dispersal of white water-lily seeds. The turtle consumes the hard-coated seeds, which remain viable after passing through the turtle, and disperses them through its feces.[122]
Common foods of the painted turtle
 
Crayfish
 
Dragonfly larva
 
American water lily
 
Duckweed (water surface)

Predators edit

Painted turtles are most vulnerable to predators when young.[103] Nests are frequently ransacked and the eggs eaten by garter snakes, crows, chipmunks, thirteen-lined ground and gray squirrels, skunks, groundhogs, raccoons, badgers, gray and red fox, and humans.[103] The small and sometimes bite-size, numerous hatchlings fall prey to water bugs, bass, catfish, bullfrogs, snapping turtles, three types of snakes (copperheads, racers and water snakes), herons, rice rats, weasels, muskrats, minks, and raccoons. As adults, the turtles' armored shells protect them from many potential predators, but they still occasionally fall prey to alligators, ospreys, crows, red-shouldered hawks, bald eagles, and especially raccoons.[103]

Painted turtles defend themselves by kicking, scratching, biting, or urinating.[103] In contrast to land tortoises, painted turtles can right themselves if they are flipped upside down.[123]

Important predators of the painted turtle
Of eggs:
 
Red fox

 
Plains garter snake

 
Crows
Of hatchlings:
 
Common snapping turtle

 
Water scorpion
Of adults:
 
Raccoon

Life cycle edit

Mating edit

 
Male southern painted turtle shows his long front claws
 
Female painted turtle

The painted turtles mate in spring and fall in waters of 10–25 °C (50–77 °F).[98] Males start producing sperm in early spring, when they can bask to an internal temperature of 17 °C (63 °F).[124][125] Females begin their reproductive cycles in mid-summer, and ovulate the following spring.[114]

Courtship begins when a male follows a female until he meets her face-to-face.[113] He then strokes her face and neck with his elongated front claws, a gesture returned by a receptive female. The pair repeat the process several times, with the male retreating from and then returning to the female until she swims to the bottom, where they copulate.[114][113] As the male is smaller than the female, he is not dominant.[113] Although not directly observed, evidence indicates that the male will inflict injury on the female in attempts of coercion.[126] Males will use their tooth-like cusps on their beaks and their foreclaws during this act of coercion with the female.[127] The female stores sperm, to be used for up to three clutches, in her oviducts; the sperm may remain viable for up to three years.[128] A single clutch may have multiple fathers.[128]

Egg-laying edit

Nesting is done, by the females only, between late May and mid-July.[114] The nests are vase-shaped and are usually dug in sandy soil, often at sites with southern exposures.[129] Nests are often within 200 m (220 yd) of water, but may be as far away as 600 m (660 yd), with older females tending to nest further inland. Nest sizes vary depending on female sizes and locations but are about 5–11 cm (2–4 in) deep.[129] Females may return to the same sites several consecutive years, but if several females make their nests close together, the eggs become more vulnerable to predators.[129] Female eastern painted turtles have been shown to nest together, possibly even participating in communal nesting.[130]

 
Female digging a nest

The female's optimal body temperature while digging her nest is 29–30 °C (84–86 °F).[129] If the weather is unsuitable, for instance a too hot night in the Southeast, she delays the process until later at night.[129] Painted turtles in Virginia have been observed waiting three weeks to nest because of a hot drought.[131]

While preparing to dig her nest, the female sometimes exhibits a mysterious preliminary behavior. She presses her throat against the ground of different potential sites, perhaps sensing moisture, warmth, texture, or smell, although her exact motivation is unknown. She may further temporize by excavating several false nests[129] as the wood turtles also do.[132]

The female relies on her hind feet for digging. She may accumulate so much sand and mud on her feet that her mobility is reduced, making her vulnerable to predators. To lighten her labors, she lubricates the area with her bladder water.[129] Once the nest is complete, the female deposits into the hole. The freshly laid eggs are white, elliptical, porous, and flexible.[133] From start to finish, the female's work may take four hours. Sometimes she remains on land overnight afterwards, before returning to her home water.[129]

Females can lay five clutches per year, but two is a normal average after including the 30–50% of a population's females that do not produce any clutches in a given year.[129] In some northern populations, no females lay more than one clutch per year.[129] Bigger females tend to lay bigger eggs and more eggs per clutch.[134] Clutch sizes of the subspecies vary, although the differences may reflect different environments, rather than different genetics. The two more northerly subspecies, western and midland, are larger and have more eggs per clutch—11.9 and 7.6, respectively—than the eastern (4.9). Within subspecies, also, the more northerly females lay larger clutches.[129]

Growth edit

 
Hatchlings
 
A painted turtle hatching with an egg tooth.

Incubation lasts 72–80 days in the wild[114] and for a similar period in artificial conditions.[131] In August and September, the young turtle breaks out from its egg, using a special projection of its jaw called the egg tooth.[63] Not all offspring leave the nest immediately, though.[114] Hatchlings north of a line from Nebraska to northern Illinois to New Jersey[135] typically arrange themselves symmetrically[136] in the nest and overwinter to emerge the following spring.[114]

The hatchling's ability to survive winter in the nest has allowed the painted turtle to extend its range farther north than any other American turtle. The painted turtle is genetically adapted to survive extended periods of subfreezing temperatures with blood that can remain supercooled and skin that resists penetration from ice crystals in the surrounding ground.[135] The hardest freezes nevertheless kill many hatchlings.[114]

Immediately after hatching, turtles are dependent on egg yolk material for sustenance.[136] About a week to a week and a half after emerging from their eggs (or the following spring if emergence is delayed), hatchlings begin feeding to support growth. The young turtles grow rapidly at first, sometimes doubling their size in the first year. Growth slows sharply at sexual maturity and may stop completely.[137] Likely owing to differences of habitat and food by water body, growth rates often differ from population to population in the same area. Among the subspecies, the western painted turtles are the quickest growers.[138]

Females grow faster than males overall, and must be larger to mature sexually.[137] In most populations males reach sexual maturity at 2–4 years old, and females at 6–10.[125] Size and age at maturity increase with latitude;[56] at the northern edge of their range, males reach sexual maturity at 7–9 years of age and females at 11–16.[113]

Behavior edit

Daily routine and basking edit

 
Basking for warmth

A cold-blooded reptile, the painted turtle regulates its temperature through its environment, notably by basking. All ages bask for warmth, often alongside other species of turtle. Sometimes more than 50 individuals are seen on one log together.[139] Turtles bask on a variety of objects, often logs, but have even been seen basking on top of common loons that were covering eggs.[140]

The turtle starts its day at sunrise, emerging from the water to bask for several hours. Warmed for activity, it returns to the water to forage.[141] After becoming chilled, the turtle re-emerges for one to two more cycles of basking and feeding.[142] At night, the turtle drops to the bottom of its water body or perches on an underwater object and sleeps.[141]

To be active, the turtle must maintain an internal body temperature between 17–23 °C (63–73 °F). When fighting infection, it manipulates its temperature up to 5 °C (8 °F) higher than normal.[139]

Seasonal routine and hibernation edit

In the spring, when the water reaches 15–18 °C (59–64 °F), the turtle begins actively foraging. However, if the water temperature exceeds 30 °C (86 °F), the turtle will not feed. In fall, the turtle stops foraging when temperatures drop below the spring set-point.[117]

During the winter, the turtle hibernates. In the north, the inactive season may be as long as from October to March, while the southernmost populations may not hibernate at all.[99] While hibernating, the body temperature of the painted turtle averages 6 °C (43 °F).[143] Periods of warm weather bring the turtle out of hibernation, and even in the north, individuals have been seen basking in February.[144]

The painted turtle hibernates by burying itself, either on the bottom of a body of water, near water in the shore-bank or the burrow of a muskrat, or in woods or pastures. When hibernating underwater, the turtle prefers shallow depths, no more than 2 m (7 ft). Within the mud, it may dig down an additional 1 m (3 ft).[143] In this state, the turtle does not breathe, although if surroundings allow, it may get some oxygen through its skin.[145] The species is one of the best-studied vertebrates able to survive long periods without oxygen. Adaptations of its blood chemistry, brain, heart, and particularly its shell allow the turtle to survive extreme lactic acid buildup while oxygen-deprived.[146]

Anoxia tolerance edit

During the winter months, painted turtles become ice-locked and spend their time in either hypoxic (low oxygen) or anoxic (no oxygen) regions of the pond or lake.[147] Painted turtles essentially hold their breath until the following spring when the ice melts. As a result, painted turtles rely on anaerobic respiration, which leads to the production of lactic acid.[148] However, painted turtles can tolerate long periods of anoxia due to three factors: a depressed metabolic rate, large glycogen stores in the liver, and sequestering lactate in the shell and releasing carbonate buffers to the extracellular fluid.[148]

The shell of an adult painted turtle has the largest concentration of carbonate content recorded among animals.[149] This large carbonate content helps the painted turtle buffer the accumulation of lactic acid during anoxia. Both the shell and skeleton release calcium and magnesium carbonates to buffer extracellular lactic acid.[150][151] A painted turtle can also sequester 44% of total body lactate in their shell.[152] Despite the shell's large buffering contribution, it does not experience any significant decrease in mechanical properties under natural conditions.[153]

The duration of anoxia tolerance varies depending on the sub-species of painted turtle. The western painted turtle (C. picta bellii) can survive 170 days of anoxia, followed by the midland painted turtle (C. picta marginata) which can survive 150 days, and finally the eastern painted turtle (C. picta picta) which can survive 125 days.[153][154][155][156] Differences in anoxia tolerance are partially attributed to the rate of lactate production and buffering capability in painted turtles.[154] Furthermore, northern populations of painted turtles have a higher anoxia tolerance than southern populations.[154]

Other anoxia tolerant freshwater turtles include: the southern painted turtle (Chrysemys dorsalis), which can survive 75–86 days of anoxia, the snapping turtle (Chelydra serpentina), which can survive 100 days under anoxia, and the map turtle (Graptemys geographica), which can survive 50 days of anoxia.[154][156][157][158] One reason for the difference in duration between more anoxia-tolerant species and less anoxia-tolerant species is the turtle's ability to buffer lactic acid accumulation during anoxia.[159]

Unlike adult painted turtles, hatchlings can survive only 40 days, but still exhibit high anoxia tolerance and freeze tolerance compared to other hatchling species (30 days for Chelydra serpentina, and 15 days for Graptemys geographica) due to cold winters.[160][161]

Movement edit

 
Moving on land

Searching for water, food, or mates, the painted turtles travel up to several kilometers at a time.[162] During summer, in response to heat and water-clogging vegetation, the turtles may vacate shallow marshes for more permanent waters.[162] Short overland migrations may involve hundreds of turtles together.[99] If heat and drought are prolonged, the turtles will bury themselves and, in extreme cases, die.[163]

Foraging turtles frequently cross lakes or travel linearly down creeks.[164] Daily crossings of large ponds have been observed.[163] Tag and release studies show that sex also drives turtle movement. Males travel the most, up to 26 km (16 mi), between captures; females the second most, up to 8 km (5 mi), between captures; and juveniles the least, less than 2 km (1.2 mi), between captures.[162] Males move the most and are most likely to change wetlands because they seek mates.[163]

The painted turtles, through visual recognition, have homing capabilities.[162] Many individuals can return to their collection points after being released elsewhere, trips that may require them to traverse land. One experiment placed 98 turtles varying several-kilometer distances from their home wetland; 41 returned. When living in a single large body of water, the painted turtles can home from up to 6 km (4 mi) away. Another experiment found that if placed far enough away from water the turtles will just walk in straight paths and not orient towards water or in any specific direction which indicates a lack of homing ability.[165] Females may use homing to help locate suitable nesting sites.[162]

Eastern painted turtle movements may contribute to aquatic plant seed dispersal. A study done in Massachusetts found that the quantity of intact macrophyte seeds defecated by Eastern painted turtles can be high and that the seeds of specifically Nymphaea ordorata that were found in feces were capable of moderate to high level germination. As turtles move between ponds and habitats, they carry seeds along with them to new locations.[165]

Interaction with humans edit

Conservation edit

 
British Columbia road sign (for painted turtle protection)

The species is currently classified as least concern by the IUCN but populations have been subject to decline locally.[2]

The decline in painted turtle populations is not a simple matter of dramatic range reduction, like that of the American bison. Instead the turtle is classified as G5 (demonstrably widespread) in its Natural Heritage Global Rank,[62] and the IUCN rates it as a species of least concern.[3] The painted turtle's high reproduction rate and its ability to survive in polluted wetlands and artificially made ponds have allowed it to maintain its range,[46][166] but the post-Columbus settlement of North America has reduced its numbers.[167][168]

Only within the Pacific Northwest is the turtle's range eroding. Even there, in Washington, the painted turtle is designated S5 (demonstrably widespread). However, in Oregon, the painted turtle is designated S2 (imperiled),[169] and in British Columbia, the turtle's populations in the Coast and Interior regions are labeled "endangered"[170] and "of special concern", respectively.[171][nb 6]

Much is written about the different factors that threaten the painted turtle, but they are unquantified, with only inferences of relative importance.[103][105][167] A primary threat category is habitat loss in various forms. Related to water habitat, there is drying of wetlands, clearing of aquatic logs or rocks (basking sites), and clearing of shoreline vegetation, which allows more predator access[176] or increased human foot traffic.[177][178] Related to nesting habitat, urbanization or planting can remove needed sunny soils.[179]

Another significant human impact is roadkill—dead turtles, especially females, are commonly seen on summer roads.[180] In addition to direct killing, roads genetically isolate some populations.[180] Localities have tried to limit roadkill by constructing underpasses,[181] highway barriers,[123] and crossing signs.[182] Oregon has introduced public education on turtle awareness, safe swerving, and safely assisting turtles across the road.[183]

In the West, human-introduced bass, bullfrogs, and especially snapping turtles, have increased the predation of hatchlings.[123][184] Outside the Southeast, where sliders are native, released pet red-eared slider turtles increasingly compete with painted turtles.[185] In cities, increased urban predators (raccoons, canines, and felines) may impact painted turtles by eating their eggs.[176]

Other factors of concern for the painted turtles include over-collection from the wild,[186] released pets introducing diseases[187] or reducing genetic variability,[185] pollution,[188] boating traffic, angler's hooks (the turtles are noteworthy bait-thieves), wanton shooting, and crushing by agricultural machines or golf course lawnmowers or all-terrain vehicles.[189][190][191] Gervais and colleagues note that research itself impacts the populations and that much funded turtle trapping work has not been published. They advocate discriminating more on what studies are done, thereby putting fewer turtles into scientists' traps.[192] Global warming represents an uncharacterized future threat.[168][193]

As the most common turtle in Nova Scotia, the eastern painted turtle is not listed under the Species at Risk Act for conservation requirements.[194]

Oregon conservation video: If video play problematic, try external links within citations.[195][196] Note list of factors at 0:30–0:60 and hoop trap at 1:50–2:00.

Pets and other uses edit

"... we do not necessarily encourage people to collect these turtles. Turtles kept as pets usually soon become ill ... The best way to enjoy our native turtles is to observe them in the wild ... it would be better to take a picture than a 'picta'!"

Pennsylvania Fish and Boat Commission[78]

According to a trade data study, painted turtles were the second most popular pet turtles after red-eared sliders in the early 1990s.[197] As of 2010, most U.S. states allow, but discourage, painted turtle pets, although Oregon forbids keeping them as pets,[198] and Indiana prohibits their sale.[187] U.S. federal law prohibits sale or transport of any turtle less than 10 cm (4 in), to limit human contact to salmonella.[199] However, a loophole for scientific samples allows some small turtles to be sold, and illegal trafficking also occurs.[184][200]

Painted turtle pet-keeping requirements are similar to those of the red-eared slider. Keepers are urged to provide them with adequate space and a basking site, and water that is regularly filtered and changed. Aquatic turtles are generally unsuitable pets for children, as they do not enjoy being held. Hobbyists have maintained turtles in captivity for decades.[201][202][203] Painted turtles are long-lived pets, and have a lifespan of up to 40 years in captivity.

The painted turtle is sometimes eaten but is not highly regarded as food,[167][204][205] as even the largest subspecies, the western painted turtle, is inconveniently small and larger turtles are available.[206] Schools frequently dissect painted turtles, which are sold by biological supply companies;[207] specimens often come from the wild but may be captive-bred.[208] In the Midwest, turtle racing is popular at summer fairs.[207][209][210]

Capture edit

Commercial harvesting of painted turtles in the wild is controversial and, increasingly, restricted.[211][212] Wisconsin formerly had virtually unrestricted trapping of painted turtles but based on qualitative observations forbade all commercial harvesting in 1997.[213] Neighboring Minnesota, where trappers collected more than 300,000 painted turtles during the 1990s,[180] commissioned a study of painted turtle harvesting.[207] Scientists found that harvested lakes averaged half the painted turtle density of off-limit lakes, and population modeling suggested that unrestricted harvests could produce a large decline in turtle populations.[186] In response, Minnesota forbade new harvesters in 2002 and limited trap numbers. Although harvesting continued,[186] subsequent takes averaged half those of the 1990s.[214] In 2023, Minnesota banned the practice of commercial turtle trapping.[215] As of 2009, painted turtles faced virtually unlimited harvesting in Arkansas, Iowa, Missouri, Ohio, and Oklahoma;[216] since then, Missouri has prohibited their harvesting.[217]

 
Basking trap in Minnesota

Individuals who trap painted turtles typically do so to earn additional income,[186][211] selling a few thousand a year at $1–2 each.[207] Many trappers have been involved in the trade for generations, and value it as a family activity.[213] Some harvesters disagree with limiting the catch, saying the populations are not dropping.[213]

Many U.S. state fish and game departments allow non-commercial taking of painted turtles under a creel limit, and require a fishing (sometimes hunting) license;[nb 7] others completely forbid the recreational capture of painted turtles. Trapping is not allowed in Oregon, where western painted turtle populations are in decline,[222] and in Missouri, where there are populations of both southern and western subspecies.[217] In Canada, Ontario protects both subspecies present, the midland and western,[223] and British Columbia protects its dwindling western painted turtles.[63]

Capture methods are also regulated by locality. Typically trappers use either floating "basking traps" or partially submerged, baited "hoop traps".[224] Trapper opinions,[224] commercial records,[214] and scientific studies[224][225][226] show that basking traps are more effective for collecting painted turtles, while the hoop traps work better for collecting "meat turtles" (snapping turtles and soft-shell turtles). Nets, hand capture, and fishing with set lines are generally legal, but shooting, chemicals, and explosives are forbidden.[nb 8]

Culture edit

"Whereas, the Painted Turtle is a hard worker and can withstand cold temperatures like the citizens of Vermont, and Whereas, the colors of the Painted Turtle represent the beauty of our state in autumn ... the General Assembly hereby recognizes the Painted Turtle as the official state reptile ..."

Vermont J.R.S. 57[227]

Native American tribes were familiar with the painted turtle—young braves were trained to recognize its splashing into water as an alarm—and incorporated it in folklore.[228] A Potawatomi myth describes how the talking turtles, "Painted Turtle" and allies "Snapping Turtle" and "Box Turtle", outwit the village women. Painted Turtle is the star of the legend and uses his distinctive markings to trick a woman into holding him so he can bite her.[229] An Illini myth recounts how Painted Turtle put his paint on to entice a chief's daughter into the water.[230]

As of 2010, four U.S. states designated the painted turtle as official reptile. Vermont honored the reptile in 1994, following the suggestion of Cornwall Elementary School students.[227] In 1995, Michigan followed, based on the recommendation of Niles fifth graders, who discovered the state lacked an official reptile.[231] On February 2, 2005, Representative Bob Biggins introduced a bill to make the tiger salamander the official state amphibian of Illinois and to make the painted turtle the official state reptile. The bill was signed into law by Governor Rod Blagojevich on July 19, 2005.[232] Colorado chose the western painted turtle in 2008, following the efforts of two succeeding years of Jay Biachi's fourth grade classes.[233] In New York, the painted turtle narrowly lost (5,048 to 5,005, versus the common snapping turtle) a 2006 statewide student election for state reptile.[234]

 
Tommy the Turtle

In the border town of Boissevain, Manitoba, a 10,000 lb (4,500 kg) western painted turtle, Tommy the Turtle, is a roadside attraction. The statue was built in 1974 to celebrate the Canadian Turtle Derby, a festival including turtle races that ran from 1972 to 2001.[235]

Another Canadian admirer of the painted turtle is Jon Montgomery, who won the 2010 Olympic gold medal in skeleton (a form of sled) racing, while wearing a painted turtle painting on the crown of his helmet, prominently visible when he slid downhill. Montgomery, who also iconically tattooed his chest with a maple-leaf,[236] explained his visual promotion of the turtle, saying that he had assisted one to cross the road. BC Hydro referred to Montgomery's action when describing its own sponsorship of conservation research for the turtle in British Columbia.[237]

Several private entities use the painted turtle as a symbol. Wayne State University Press operates an imprint "named after the Michigan state reptile" that "publishes books on regional topics of cultural and historical interest".[238] In California, The Painted Turtle is a camp for ill children, founded by Paul Newman. Painted Turtle Winery of British Columbia trades on the "laid back and casual lifestyle" of the turtle with a "job description to bask in the sun".[239] Also, there is an Internet company in Michigan,[240] a guesthouse in British Columbia,[241] and a café in Maine that use the painted turtle commercially.[242]

In children's books, the painted turtle is a popular subject, with at least seven books published between 2000 and 2010.[nb 9]

Notes and references edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Bishop and Schmidt alluded to glacial origins even earlier.[30]
  2. ^ All turtle lengths in this article refer to the top shell (carapace) length, not the extended head to tail length.
  3. ^ The range description and map primarily rely on Conant and Collins (1998) and Ernst and Lovich have a similar range map.[29] Additional citations and notes cover details of range boundaries especially in the West.
  4. ^ Vancouver Island painted turtle populations may have resulted from escaped pets.[63]
  5. ^ See the following sources.[22][66][67][68][69]
  6. ^ The iconic painted turtle is popular in British Columbia, and the province is spending to save the painted turtle as only a few thousand turtles remain in the entire province.[172][173][174][175]
  7. ^ State fish and game creel limits.[73][190][191][218][219][220][221]
  8. ^ State fish and game taking restrictions.[73][190][191][219][220][221]
  9. ^ 2000–2010 children's books on the painted turtle.[243][244][245][246][247][248][249]

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b Ernst & Lovich 2009, pp. 184–185.
  2. ^ a b "Chrysemys picta". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Retrieved 2013-10-19.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Rhodin et al. 2010, p. 000.99.
  4. ^ a b Mann 2007, p. 6.
  5. ^ a b c Ercelawn, Aliya. "Taxonomic information". Herpetology Species Page. Prof. Theodora Pinou (Western Connecticut State University Biological and Environmental Sciences Department). Retrieved 2011-02-06.
  6. ^ Fritz, Uwe; Peter Havaš (2007). "Checklist of Chelonians of the World". Vertebrate Zoology. 57 (2): 177–179. doi:10.3897/vz.57.e30895. S2CID 87809001.
  7. ^ Cosentino, Bradley (September 11, 2010). "Wetland hydrology, area, and isolation influence occupancy and spatial turnover of the painted turtle, Chrysemys picta". Landscape Ecology. 25 (10): 1589–1600. doi:10.1007/s10980-010-9529-3. S2CID 38488888.
  8. ^ Gibbons, J. Whitfield (1968). "Population Structure and Survivorship in the Painted Turtle, Chrysemys picta". Copeia. 1968 (2): 260–268. doi:10.2307/1441752. ISSN 0045-8511. JSTOR 1441752.
  9. ^ Grosse, Andrew (1 September 2010). "Effects of turbidity on the foraging success of the eastern painted turtle". Copeia. 2010 (3): 463–467. doi:10.1643/CE-09-162. S2CID 83648930.
  10. ^ Rhodin et al. 2010, pp. 000.91, 000.99.
  11. ^ Carr 1952, p. 214.
  12. ^ "Taxonomy chapter for turtle, eastern painted (030060)". BOVA Booklet. Virginia Fish and Wildlife Information Service. 2010. Retrieved 2010-12-17.
  13. ^ Beltz, Ellin (2006). "Scientific and common names of the reptiles and amphibians of North America – explained". Retrieved 2010-12-13.
  14. ^ Beolens, Bo; Watkins, Michael; Grayson, Michael (2011). The Eponym Dictionary of Reptiles. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. xiii + 296 pp. ISBN 978-1-4214-0135-5. (Chrysemys picta belli, p. 22).
  15. ^ Hoffman, Richard L. (March 1987). (PDF). Virginia Herpetological Society Bulletin. 85. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-07-17. Retrieved 2010-12-06. When I was a child living in Clifton Forge, VA, the name by which I learned Chrysemys picta, painted turtle, was "skilpot".
  16. ^ a b Schneider, Johann Gotttlob (1783). Allgemeine naturgeschichte der schildkröten (Gothic script) (in German). Leipzig: J.G. Müller. p. 348. Retrieved 2011-02-08. ... unter dem namen Testudo picta ...
  17. ^ a b c Fritz & Havaš 2007, p. 177.
  18. ^ Gray, John Edward (1831). "A synopsis of the species of the class reptilia". In Griffith, Edward (ed.). The Animal Kingdom Arranged in Conformity with Its Organization: The class reptilia, with specific descriptions, volume 9. London: Whittikar, Treacher. p. 12. Retrieved 2011-07-20.
  19. ^ Fritz & Havaš 2007, p. 178.
  20. ^ Agassiz, Louis (1857). Contributions to the natural history of the United States of America: First monograph: in three parts. Boston: Little, Brown. pp. 439–440. Retrieved 2011-07-20. agassiz.
  21. ^ a b Rhodin, Anders G.J. (2021-11-15). Turtles of the World: Annotated Checklist and Atlas of Taxonomy, Synonymy, Distribution, and Conservation Status (9th Ed.). Chelonian Research Monographs. Vol. 8. Chelonian Research Foundation and Turtle Conservancy. doi:10.3854/crm.8.checklist.atlas.v9.2021. ISBN 978-0-9910368-3-7. S2CID 244279960.
  22. ^ a b Lee-Sasser, Marisa (December 2007). . Alabama Department of Conservation and Natural Resources. Archived from the original on 2010-08-30. Retrieved 2010-08-12. Intergrades exhibit a mix of characteristics where their ranges overlap.
  23. ^ a b c Senneke, Darrell (2003). "Differentiating painted turtles (Chrysemys picta ssp)". World Chelonian Trust. Retrieved 2010-12-09.
  24. ^ . Nova Scotia Museum. 2007. Archived from the original on 2010-12-29. Retrieved 2010-09-29.
  25. ^ . Natural Resources Canada. 2007-09-24. Archived from the original on April 21, 2009. Retrieved 2010-09-29.
  26. ^ a b c Ernst & Lovich 2009, p. 187.
  27. ^ a b Carr 1952, p. 221.
  28. ^ Record-setting Painted Western Turtle found in Regina, CBC News
  29. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Ernst & Lovich 2009, p. 185.
  30. ^ a b Bishop, Sherman; Schmidt, F. J. W. (1931). "The painted turtles of the genus Chrysemys". Zoological Series. Field Museum of Natural History. 18 (4): 123–139. Retrieved 2011-01-06.
  31. ^ a b c Bleakney, Sherman (1958-07-23). "Postglacial dispersal of the turtle Chrysemys picta". Herpetologica. 14 (2): 101–104. JSTOR 3889448. (subscription required)
  32. ^ Carr 1952, p. 213.
  33. ^ Holman, J. Alan (September 1977). "Comments on turtles of the genus Chrysemys Gray". Herpetologica. 33 (3): 274–276. JSTOR 3891939. (subscription required)
  34. ^ Ernst & Barbour 1989, p. 203.
  35. ^ "Chrysemys dorsalis". The Reptile Database. Retrieved 2022-03-28.
  36. ^ Williams, Robert W (2007-12-17). "Mass grave from the remote past" (also avail. as pdf). Norwegian Continental Shelf. Norwegian Petroleum Directorate. 2007 (3). Retrieved 2011-02-08.
  37. ^ Dobie, James L. (1981–1982). "The taxonomic relationship between Malaclemys Gray, 1844 and Graptemys agassiz, 1857 (Testudines: Emydidae)". Tulane Studies in Zoology and Botany. 23: 85–103. Retrieved 2011-01-04.
  38. ^ a b c d Ernst, Barbour & Lovich 1994, p. 276.
  39. ^ Bickham, John W.; Carr, John L. (14 December 1983). "Taxonomy and Phylogeny of the Higher Categories of Cryptodiran Turtles Based on a Cladistic Analysis of Chromosomal Data". Copeia. 1983 (4): 918–932. doi:10.2307/1445093. JSTOR 1445093. S2CID 29543729. as cited in Mann 2007, p. 10
  40. ^ Killebrew, F. C. (1977). "Mitotic chromosomes of turtles. IV. The Emydidae". Texas Journal of Science. 24: 249–253. INIST PASCAL7850376068 NAID 20001602985. as cited in Mann 2007, p. 10
  41. ^ Killebrew, Flavius C. (1975-07-28). "Mitotic chromosomes of turtles: I. The Pelomedusidae". Journal of Herpetology. 9 (3): 282–285. doi:10.2307/1563192. JSTOR 1563192.
  42. ^ a b Mann 2007, p. 11.
  43. ^ Waters, J. H. (1969). "Additional observations of Southeastern Massachusetts insular and". Copeia. 1 (1): 179–182. doi:10.2307/1441709. JSTOR 1441709. as cited in Mann 2007, p. 11
  44. ^ Gervais et al. 2009, p. 22.
  45. ^ . National Human Genome Research Institutes (National Institutes of Health). Archived from the original on 2012-07-27. Retrieved 2011-02-14.
  46. ^ a b c d Ercelawn, Aliya. "Species identification". Herpetology Species Page. Prof. Theodora Pinou (Western Connecticut State University Biology and Environmental Sciences). Retrieved 2011-02-06.
  47. ^ a b "Painted turtle (Chrysemys picta)". Savannah River Ecology Laboratory Herpetology Program. Retrieved 2010-09-18.
  48. ^ a b c Ernst & Lovich 2009, p. 184.
  49. ^ Cohen, Mary (October 1992). "The painted turtle, Chrysemys picta". Tortuga Gazette. 28 (10): 1–3. Retrieved 2011-01-05.
  50. ^ Ernst & Lovich 2009, p. 263.
  51. ^ . Animal Bytes. Archived from the original on 2010-12-06. Retrieved 2011-01-02. Turtle— Spends most of its life in the water. Turtles tend to have webbed feet for swimming.
  52. ^ . US Bureau of Land Management. Archived from the original on June 24, 2012. Retrieved 2011-01-02. They have webbed toes for swimming ...
  53. ^ Ernst, Barbour & Lovich 1994, p. 277.
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  223. ^ "Hunting regulations 2010–2011" (PDF). Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources. Retrieved 2011-07-20.
  224. ^ a b c Gamble, Tony (2006). (PDF). Herpetological Review. 37 (3): 308–312. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2009-12-22.
  225. ^ Browne, C. L.; Hecnar, S. J. (2005). "Capture success of northern map turtles (Graptemys geographica) and other turtle species in basking vs. baited traps". Herpetological Review. 36: 145–147. cited in Gamble 2006
  226. ^ McKenna, K. C. (2001). "Chrysemys picta (painted turtle). Trapping". Herpetological Review. 32: 184. cited in Gamble 2006
  227. ^ a b "Joint resolution relating to the designation of the painted turtle as the state reptile". Retrieved 2010-12-15.
  228. ^ Macfarlan, Allan; Macfarlan, Paulette (1985-03-01). Handbook of American Indian games. Dover Publications. p. 62. ISBN 978-0-486-24837-0.
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  238. ^ . Wayne State University Press. Archived from the original on October 18, 2009. Retrieved 2010-12-07.
  239. ^ "Painted turtle winery". Retrieved 2010-12-07.
  240. ^ "Painted turtle web design". Painted Turtle Web Design. Retrieved 2011-01-02.
  241. ^ "Painted turtle guesthouse website". Retrieved 2010-12-06.
  242. ^ Staff reports (2010-03-12). . The Portland Press Herald. Archived from the original on August 7, 2011. Retrieved 2010-12-07.
  243. ^ Collier, Kevin Scott (2010). The Esther Chronicles.
  244. ^ Collier, Kent Scott (2005-04-15). Esther's Channel. Baker Tritten. ISBN 978-0-9752880-6-1.
  245. ^ Hughes, Marghanita (2010). Nika and the painted turtle.
  246. ^ Gillis, Jennifer Blizen (2004-10-30). Turtles: Pets at my House. Heinemann Library. ISBN 978-1-4034-5056-2.
  247. ^ Hipp, Andrew (2005-01-01). The Life Cycle of a Painted Turtle. Rosen Classroom. ISBN 978-1-4042-5208-0.
  248. ^ Falwell, Cathryn (2008-02-26). Turtle Splash!: Countdown at the Pond. Greenwillow Books. ISBN 978-0-06-142927-9.
  249. ^ Chrustowski, Rick (2006). Turtle Crossing. Henry Hold & Co. ISBN 978-0-8050-7498-7. So the next time you see a Turtle Crossing sign, keep your eyes open—if you're lucky, you just might see a painted turtle on her way to make a nest.

Bibliography edit

  • Carr, Archie (1952). "Genus Chrysemys: The Painted Turtles". Handbook of Turtles: The Turtles of the United States, Canada, and Baja California. Binghamton, New York: Comstock Publishing Associates a Division of Cornell University Press. pp. 213–234. ISBN 0-8014-8254-2. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  • Dupuis, Linda (2006). "COSEWIC assessment and status report on the western painted turtle Chrysemys picta bellii" (PDF). Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada. p. 29.
  • Ernst, Carl H.; Barbour, Roger William (1972). "Chrysemys picta". Turtles of the United States. Lexington, Kentucky: The University Press of Kentucky. pp. 138–146. ISBN 0-8131-1272-9. Retrieved 2011-02-08.
  • Ernst, Carl H.; Barbour, Roger William (1989). "Chrysemys". Turtles of the World. Washington, D.C., and London: Smithsonian Institution Press. pp. 201–203. ISBN 0-87474-414-8. Retrieved 2011-02-08.
  • Ernst, Carl H.; Barbour, Roger William; Lovich, Jeffery E. (1994). Dutro, Nancy P. (ed.). Turtles of the United States and Canada. Washington and London: Smithsonian Institution Press. pp. 276–296. ISBN 1-56098-346-9. Retrieved 2011-02-08.
  • Ernst, Carl H.; Lovich, Jeffery E. (2009). Turtles of the United States and Canada (2nd ed.). JHU Press. pp. 185–259. ISBN 978-0-8018-9121-2. Retrieved 2011-02-08.
  • Fritz, Uwe; Havaš, Peter (2007). "Checklist of Chelonians of the World". Vertebrate Zoology. 57 (2): 149–368. doi:10.3897/vz.57.e30895. S2CID 87809001.
  • Gervais, Jennifer; Rosenberg, Daniel; Barnes, Susan; Puchy, Claire; Stewart, Elaine (September 2009). (PDF) (technical report). U.S.D.A. Forest Service. pp. 4–61. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-08-13.
  • Mann, Melissa (May 2007). A taxonomic study of the morphological variation and intergradation of Chrysemys picta (Schneider) (Emydidae, Testudines) in West Virginia (Master's thesis). Marshall University. pp. i–64.
  • Packard, Gary, C.; Packard, Mary J.; Morjan, Carrie L.; Janzen, Fredric J. (2002). (PDF). Journal of Herpetology. 36 (2): 300–304. doi:10.2307/1566006. JSTOR 1566006. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-03-03. Retrieved 2010-12-13.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Rhodin, Anders G.J.; van Dijk, Peter Paul; Inverson, John B.; Shaffer, H. Bradley (2010-12-14). (PDF). Chelonian Research Monographs. 5: 000.89–000.138. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-07-17.

External links edit

  • Missouri Department of Conservation video of southern painted turtle (click video link): Note the discussion of red line on top of shell.
  • View the chrPic1 genome assembly in the UCSC Genome Browser.

painted, turtle, this, article, about, north, american, turtle, summer, camp, painted, turtle, painted, turtle, chrysemys, picta, most, widespread, native, turtle, north, america, lives, relatively, slow, moving, fresh, waters, from, southern, canada, northern. This article is about the North American turtle For the summer camp see The Painted Turtle The painted turtle Chrysemys picta is the most widespread native turtle of North America It lives in relatively slow moving fresh waters from southern Canada to northern Mexico and from the Atlantic to the Pacific They have been shown to prefer large wetlands with long periods of inundation and emergent vegetation 7 This species is one of the few that is specially adapted to tolerate freezing temperatures for extended periods of time due to an antifreeze like substance in their blood that keeps their cells from freezing 8 This turtle is a member of the genus Chrysemys which is part of the pond turtle family Emydidae Fossils show that the painted turtle existed 15 million years ago Three regionally based subspecies the eastern midland and western evolved during the last ice age The southern painted turtle C dorsalis is alternately considered the only other species in Chrysemys or another subspecies of C picta Painted turtleTemporal range 15 0 Ma PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg N Neogene recent 1 Western painted turtleConservation statusLeast Concern IUCN 3 1 2 Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass ReptiliaOrder TestudinesSuborder CryptodiraSuperfamily TestudinoideaFamily EmydidaeSubfamily DeirochelyinaeGenus ChrysemysSpecies C pictaBinomial nameChrysemys picta Schneider 1783 Subspecies 3 C p bellii 3 C p marginata 3 C p picta 3 Yellow Eastern C p picta Orange Midland C p marginata Blue Southern C dorsalis Red Western C p bellii Synonyms 6 Species synonymy 4 Testudo pictaSchneider 1783 Chrysemys cinereaBonnaterre 1789 Emys belliiGray 1831 Emys oregoniensisHarlan 1837 Chrysemys pictaGray 1856 Chrysemys marginataAgassiz 1857 Chrysemys dorsalisAgassiz 1857 Chrysemys nuttalliAgassiz 1857 Chrysemys pulchraGray 1873 Chrysemys trealeaseiHurter 1911Subspecies synonymy 4 5 Chrysemys picta pictaTestudo picta Schneider 1783 Testudo cinerea Bonnaterre 1789 Emys cinerea Schweigger 1812 Emys picta Schweigger 1812 Clemmys picta Wagler 1830 Terrapene picta Bonaparte 1831 Chrysemys picta Gray 1856 Chrysemys cinerea Boulenger 1889 Clemmys cinerea Strauch 1890 Chrysemys cinerea cinerea Siebenrock 1909 Chrysemis picta Kallert 1927 Chrysemys picta picta Bishop amp Schmidt 1931 Chrysema picta Chan amp Cohen 1964 Pseudemys picta Arnold 2002Chrysemys picta belliiEmys bellii Gray 1831 Clemmys Clemmys bellii Fitzinger 1835 Emys oregoniensis Harlan 1837 Chrysemys bellii Gray 1844 Emys originensis Gray 1844 ex errore Emys oregonensis LeConte 1854 ex errore Emys origonensis Gray 1856 ex errore Chrysemys nuttalii Agassiz 1857 Chrysemys oregonensis Agassiz 1857 Clemmys oregoniensis Strauch 1862 Chrysemys nuttallii Gray 1863 ex errore Chrysemys orbigniensis Gray 1863 Chrysemys pulchra Gray 1873 Emys belli Gunther 1874 ex errore Chrysemys cinerea var bellii Boulenger 1889 Chrysemys belli Ditmars 1907 Chrysemys treleasei Hurter 1911 Chrysemys marginata bellii Stejneger amp Barbour 1917 Chrysemys bellii bellii Ruthven 1924 Chrysemys picta bellii Bishop amp Schmidt 1931 Chrysemys picta belli Mertens Muller amp Rust 1934 Chrysemys belli belli Pickwell 1948 Chrysemys nuttalli Schmidt 1953 ex errore Chrysemys picta bollii Kuhn 1964 ex errore Chrysemys trealeasei Ernst 1971 ex errore Chrysemys trealeasi Smith amp Smith 1980 ex errore Chrysemys picta dorsalisChrysemys dorsalis Agassiz 1857 Clemmys picta var dorsalis Strauch 1862 Chrysemys cinerea var dorsalis Boulenger 1889 Chrysemys marginata dorsalis Stejneger amp Barbour 1917 Chrysemys bellii dorsalis Ruthven 1924 Chrysemys picta dorsalis Bishop amp Schmidt 1931Chrysemys picta marginataChrysemys marginata Agassiz 1857 Clemmys marginata Strauch 1862 Chrysemys marginata marginata Stejneger amp Barbour 1917 Chrysemys bellii marginata Ruthven 1924 Chrysemys picta marginata Bishop amp Schmidt 1931The adult painted turtle is 13 25 cm 5 10 in long the male is smaller than the female The turtle s top shell is dark and smooth without a ridge Its skin is olive to black with red orange or yellow stripes on its extremities The subspecies can be distinguished by their shells the eastern has straight aligned top shell segments the midland has a large gray mark on the bottom shell the western has a red pattern on the bottom shell The turtle eats aquatic vegetation algae and small water creatures including insects crustaceans and fish Painted turtles primarily feed while in water and are able to locate and subdue prey even in heavily clouded conditions 9 Although they are frequently consumed as eggs or hatchlings by rodents canines and snakes the adult turtles hard shells protect them from most predators Reliant on warmth from its surroundings the painted turtle is active only during the day when it basks for hours on logs or rocks During winter the turtle hibernates usually in the mud at the bottom of water bodies The turtles mate in spring and autumn Females dig nests on land and lay eggs between late spring and mid summer Hatched turtles grow until sexual maturity 2 9 years for males 6 16 for females In the traditional tales of Algonquian tribes the colorful turtle played the part of a trickster In modern times four U S states Colorado Illinois Michigan and Vermont have named the painted turtle their official reptile While habitat loss and road killings have reduced the turtle s population its ability to live in human disturbed settings has helped it remain the most abundant turtle in North America Adults in the wild can live for more than 55 years Contents 1 Taxonomy and evolution 1 1 Classification 1 2 Subspecies 1 3 Fossils 1 4 DNA 2 Description 2 1 Similar species 3 Distribution 3 1 Range 3 1 1 Eastern painted turtle 3 1 2 Midland painted turtle 3 1 3 Western painted turtle 3 1 4 Human introduced range 3 2 Habitat 3 3 Population features 4 Ecology 4 1 Diet 4 2 Predators 5 Life cycle 5 1 Mating 5 2 Egg laying 5 3 Growth 6 Behavior 6 1 Daily routine and basking 6 2 Seasonal routine and hibernation 6 3 Anoxia tolerance 6 4 Movement 7 Interaction with humans 7 1 Conservation 7 2 Pets and other uses 7 3 Capture 7 4 Culture 8 Notes and references 8 1 Notes 8 2 Citations 8 3 Bibliography 9 External linksTaxonomy and evolution edit nbsp German naturalist Johann Gottlob Schneider first categorized the painted turtleThe painted turtle C picta is the only species in the genus Chrysemys 5 The parent family for Chrysemys is Emydidae the pond turtles Emydidae is split into two sub families Chrysemys is part of the Deirochelyinae Western Hemisphere branch 10 The four subspecies of the painted turtle are the eastern C p picta midland C p marginata southern C p dorsalis and western C p bellii 11 The painted turtle s generic name is derived from the Ancient Greek words for gold chryso and freshwater tortoise emys the species name originates from the Latin for colored pictus 12 The subspecies name marginata derives from the Latin for border and refers to the red markings on the outer marginal part of the upper shell dorsalis is from the Latin for back referring to the prominent dorsal stripe and bellii honors English zoologist Thomas Bell a collaborator of Charles Darwin 13 14 An alternate East Coast common name for the painted turtle is skilpot from the Dutch for turtle schildpad 15 Classification edit Originally described in 1783 by Johann Gottlob Schneider as Testudo picta 5 16 the painted turtle was called Chrysemys picta first by John Edward Gray in 1855 Four subspecies were then recognized the eastern by Schneider in 1783 16 17 the western by Gray in 1831 17 18 and the midland and southern by Louis Agassiz in 1857 though the southern painted turtle is now generally considered a full species 19 20 21 Subspecies edit Although the subspecies of painted turtle intergrade blend together at range boundaries 22 they are distinct within the hearts of their ranges 23 The male eastern painted turtle C p picta is 13 17 cm 5 7 in long while the female is 14 17 cm 6 7 in The upper shell is olive green to black and may possess a pale stripe down the middle and red markings on the periphery The segments scutes of the top shell have pale leading edges and occur in straight rows across the back unlike all other North American turtles including the other three subspecies of painted turtle which have alternating segments 23 The bottom shell is plain yellow or lightly spotted Sometimes as few as one dark grey spot near the lower center of the shell 24 The midland painted turtle C p marginata is 10 25 cm 4 10 in long 25 The centrally located midland is the hardest to distinguish from the other three subspecies 23 Its bottom shell has a characteristic symmetrical dark shadow in the center which varies in size and prominence 26 The largest subspecies is the western painted turtle C p bellii which grows up to 26 6 cm 10 in long 27 28 Its top shell has a mesh like pattern of light lines 29 and the top stripe present in other subspecies is missing or faint Its bottom shell has a large colored splotch that spreads to the edges further than the midland and often has red hues 29 Eastern painted turtleC p picta Midland painted turtleC p marginata Western painted turtleC p bellii nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Until the 1930s many of the subspecies of the painted turtle were labeled by biologists as full species within Chrysemys but this varied by the researcher The painted turtles in the border region between the western and midland subspecies were sometimes considered a full species treleasei In 1931 Bishop and Schmidt defined the current four in one taxonomy of species and subspecies Based on comparative measurements of turtles from throughout the range they subordinated species to subspecies and eliminated treleasei 30 Since at least 1958 31 nb 1 the subspecies were thought to have evolved in response to geographic isolation during the last ice age 100 000 to 11 000 years ago 29 At that time painted turtles were divided into three different populations eastern painted turtles along the southeastern Atlantic coast southern painted turtles around the southern Mississippi River and western painted turtles in the southwestern United States 26 The populations were not completely isolated for sufficiently long hence wholly different species never evolved When the glaciers retreated about 11 000 years ago all three subspecies moved north The western and southern subspecies met in Missouri and hybridized to produce the midland painted turtle which then moved east and north through the Ohio and Tennessee river basins 31 26 Biologists have long debated the genera of closely related subfamily mates Chrysemys Pseudemys cooters and Trachemys sliders After 1952 some combined Pseudemys and Chrysemys because of similar appearance 32 In 1964 based on measurements of the skull and feet Samuel B McDowell proposed all three genera be merged into one However further measurements in 1967 contradicted this taxonomic arrangement Also in 1967 J Alan Holman 33 a paleontologist and herpetologist pointed out that although the three turtles were often found together in nature and had similar mating patterns they did not crossbreed In the 1980s studies of turtles cell structures biochemistries and parasites further indicated that Chrysemys Pseudemys and Trachemys should remain in separate genera 34 In 2003 Starkey et al proposed that Chrysemys dorsalis formerly considered a subspecies of C picta to be a distinct species sister to all subspecies in C picta Although this proposal was largely unrecognized at the time due to evidence of hybridization between dorsalis and picta the Turtle Taxonomy Working Group and the Reptile Database have since followed through with it although both the subspecific and specific names have been recognized 17 35 21 Fossils edit nbsp Top and bottom shell fossils about 5 million years old from a Tennessee sinkhole 36 Although its evolutionary history what the forerunner to the species was and how the close relatives branched off is not well understood the painted turtle is common in the fossil record 37 The oldest samples found in Nebraska date to about 15 million years ago Fossils from 15 million to about 5 million years ago are restricted to the Nebraska Kansas area but more recent fossils are gradually more widely distributed Fossils newer than 300 000 years old are found in almost all the United States and southern Canada 1 DNA edit The turtle s karyotype nuclear DNA rather than mitochondrial DNA consists of 50 chromosomes the same number as the rest of its subfamily mates and the most common number for Emydidae turtles in general 38 39 40 Less well related turtles have from 26 to 66 chromosomes 41 Little systematic study of variations of the painted turtle s karotype among populations has been done 42 However in 1967 research on protein structure of offshore island populations in New England showed differences from mainland turtles 43 Comparison of subspecies chromosomal DNA has been discussed to help address the debate over Starkey s proposed taxonomy but as of 2009 had not been reported 42 44 The complete sequencing of the genetic code for the painted turtle was at a draft assembled state in 2010 The turtle was one of two reptiles chosen to be first sequenced 45 Description edit nbsp Painted turtle s yellow face stripes philtrum nasal groove and foot webbingAdult painted turtles can grow to 13 25 cm 5 10 in long with males being smaller The shell is oval smooth with little grooves where the large scale like plates overlap and flat bottomed 46 nb 2 47 38 The color of the top shell carapace varies from olive to black Darker specimens are more common where the bottom of the water body is darker The bottom shell plastron is yellow sometimes red sometimes with dark markings in the center Similar to the top shell the turtle s skin is olive to black but with red and yellow stripes on its neck legs and tail 48 49 As with other pond turtles such as the bog turtle the painted turtle s feet are webbed to aid swimming 50 51 52 The head of the turtle is distinctive The face has only yellow stripes with a large yellow spot and streak behind each eye and on the chin two wide yellow stripes that meet at the tip of the jaw 46 38 48 The turtle s upper jaw is shaped into an inverted V philtrum with a downward facing tooth like projection on each side 53 The hatchling has a proportionally larger head eyes and tail and a more circular shell than the adult 54 55 The adult female is generally longer than the male 10 25 cm 4 10 in versus 7 15 cm 3 6 in 48 56 For a given length the female has a higher more rounded less flat top shell 57 The female weighs around 500 g 18 oz on average against the males average adult weight of roughly 300 g 11 oz 58 The female s greater body volume supports her egg production 59 The male has longer foreclaws and a longer thicker tail with the anus cloaca located further out on the tail 46 47 38 60 Similar species edit The painted turtle has a very similar appearance to the red eared slider the most common pet turtle and the two are often confused The painted turtle can be distinguished because it is flatter than the slider Also the slider has a prominent red marking on the side of its head the ear and a spotted bottom shell both features missing in the painted turtle 61 Painted turtle Red eared slider nbsp nbsp Distribution editRange edit The most widespread North American turtle 62 the painted turtle is the only turtle whose native range extends from the Atlantic to the Pacific nb 3 It is native to eight of Canada s ten provinces forty five of the fifty United States and one of Mexico s thirty one states On the East Coast it lives from the Canadian Maritimes to the U S state of Georgia On the West Coast it lives in British Columbia Washington and Oregon and offshore on southeast Vancouver Island nb 4 The northernmost American turtle 63 its range includes much of southern Canada To the south its range reaches the U S Gulf Coast in Louisiana and Alabama In the southwestern United States there are only dispersed populations It is found in one river in extreme northern Mexico It is absent in a part of southwestern Virginia and the adjacent states as well as in north central Alabama 29 64 65 nbsp Native range of the painted turtle C picta Dark grey for national borders White for state and province borders Dark blue for rivers only showing those in article Eastern C p picta Midland C p marginata Southern C dorsalis Western C p bellii Intergrade mixtures large areas only Mix of eastern and midland Mix of eastern and southern Mix of midland and westernThe borders between the four subspecies are not sharp because the subspecies interbreed Many studies have been performed in the border regions to assess the intermediate turtles usually by comparing the anatomical features of hybrids that result from intergradation of the classical subspecies nb 5 Despite the imprecision the subspecies are assigned nominal ranges Eastern painted turtle edit nbsp Eastern painted turtle in MassachusettsThe eastern painted turtle ranges from southeastern Canada to Georgia with a western boundary at approximately the Appalachians At its northern extremes the turtle tends to be restricted to the warmer areas closer to the Atlantic Ocean It is uncommon in far north New Hampshire and in Maine is common only in a strip about 50 miles from the coast 70 71 In Canada it lives in New Brunswick and Nova Scotia but not in Quebec or Prince Edward Island To the south it is not found in the coastal lowlands of southern North Carolina South Carolina or Georgia or in southern Georgia in general or at all in Florida 29 64 72 73 In the northeast there is extensive mixing with the midland subspecies and some writers have called these turtles a hybrid swarm 31 74 75 In the southeast the border between the eastern and midland is more sharp as mountain chains separate the subspecies to different drainage basins 64 76 Midland painted turtle editThe midland painted turtle lives from southern Ontario and Quebec through the eastern U S Midwest states to Kentucky Tennessee and northwestern Alabama where it intergrades with the southern painted turtle 77 It also is found eastward through West Virginia western Maryland and Pennsylvania The midland painted turtle appears to be moving east especially in Pennsylvania 78 To the northeast it is found in western New York and much of Vermont and it intergrades extensively with the eastern subspecies 79 64 Western painted turtle edit nbsp Western painted turtle watercolor by Gordon The western painted turtle s northern range includes southern parts of western Canada from Ontario through Manitoba Saskatchewan Alberta and British Columbia In Ontario the western subspecies is found north of Minnesota and directly north of Lake Superior but there is a 130 km 80 mi gap to the east of Lake Superior in the area of harshest winter climate where no painted turtles of any subspecies occur Thus Ontario s western subspecies does not intergrade with the midland painted turtle of southeastern Ontario 67 In Manitoba the turtle is numerous and ranges north to Lake Manitoba and the lower part of Lake Winnipeg The turtle is also common in south Saskatchewan 80 but in Alberta there may only be 100 individuals all found very near the U S border mostly in the southeast 29 64 81 82 nbsp Western painted turtle in OregonIn British Columbia populations exist in the interior in the vicinity of the Kootenai Columbia Okanagan and Thompson river valleys At the coast turtles occur near the mouth of the Fraser and a bit further north as well as the bottom of Vancouver Island and some other nearby islands Within British Columbia the turtle s range is not continuous and can better be understood as northward extensions of the range from the United States High mountains present barriers to east west movement of the turtles within the province or from Alberta Some literature has shown isolated populations much further north in British Columbia and Alberta but these were probably pet releases 29 64 81 82 In the United States the western subspecies forms a wide intergrade area with the midland subspecies covering much of Illinois as well as a strip of Wisconsin along Lake Michigan and part of the Upper Peninsula of Michigan UP Further west the rest of Illinois Wisconsin and the UP are part of the range proper as are all of Minnesota and Iowa as well as all of Missouri except a narrow strip in the south All of North Dakota is within range all of South Dakota except a very small area in the west and all of Nebraska Almost all of Kansas is in range the border of that state with Oklahoma is roughly the species range border but the turtle is found in three counties of north central Oklahoma 29 64 83 81 To the northwest almost all of Montana is in range Only a narrow strip in the west along most of the Idaho border which is at the Continental Divide lacks turtles 84 Wyoming is almost entirely out of range only the lower elevation areas near the eastern and northern borders have painted turtles 85 In Idaho the turtles are found throughout the far north upper half of the Idaho Panhandle Recently separate Idaho populations have been observed in the southwest near the Payette and Boise rivers and the southeast near St Anthony 86 In Washington state turtles are common throughout the state within lower elevation river valleys 87 In Oregon the turtle is native to the northern part of the state throughout the Columbia River Valley as well as the Willamette River Valley north of Salem 29 81 88 To the southwest the painted turtle s range is fragmented In Colorado while range is continuous in the eastern prairie half of the state it is absent in most of the western mountainous part of the state However the turtle is confirmed present in the lower elevation southwest part of the state Archuleta and La Plata counties where a population ranges into northern New Mexico in the San Juan River basin 89 In New Mexico the main distribution follows the Rio Grande and the Pecos River two waterways that run in a north south direction through the state 90 Within the aforementioned rivers it is also found in the northern part of Far West Texas 91 In Utah the painted turtle lives in an area to the south Kane County in streams draining into the Colorado River although it is disputed if they are native 81 92 93 In Arizona the painted turtle is native to an area in the east Lyman Lake 94 95 The painted turtle is not native to Nevada or California 29 81 In Mexico 90 painted turtles have been found about 50 miles south of New Mexico near Galeana in the state of Chihuahua There two expeditions 96 97 found the turtles in the Rio Santa Maria which is in a closed basin 29 81 Human introduced range edit Pet releases are starting to establish the painted turtle outside its native range It has been introduced into waterways near Phoenix Arizona 94 and to Germany Indonesia the Philippines and Spain 3 Habitat edit nbsp Painted turtle habitat in New HampshireTo thrive painted turtles need fresh waters with soft bottoms basking sites and aquatic vegetation They find their homes in shallow waters with slow moving currents such as creeks marshes ponds and the shores of lakes The subspecies have evolved different habitat preferences 98 The eastern painted turtle is very aquatic leaving the immediate vicinity of its water body only when forced by drought to migrate 99 Along the Atlantic painted turtles have appeared in brackish waters They can be found in wetland areas like swamps and marshes with a thick layer of mud as well as sandy bottoms with lots of vegetation 100 98 The midland and southern painted turtles seek especially quiet waters usually shores and coves They favor shallows that contain dense vegetation and have an unusual toleration of pollution 101 102 The western painted turtle lives in streams and lakes similar to the other painted turtles but also inhabits pasture ponds and roadside pools It is found as high as 1 800 m 5 900 ft 27 Population features edit nbsp Shell marking codeWithin much of its range the painted turtle is the most abundant turtle species Population densities range from 10 to 840 turtles per hectare 2 5 acres of water surface Warmer climates produce higher relative densities among populations and habitat desirability also influences density Rivers and large lakes have lower densities because only the shore is desirable habitat the central deep waters skew the surface based estimates Also lake and river turtles have to make longer linear trips to access equivalent amounts of foraging space 103 Adults outnumber juveniles in most populations but gauging the ratios is difficult because juveniles are harder to catch with current sampling methods estimates of age distribution vary widely 104 Annual survival rate of painted turtles increases with age The probability of a painted turtle surviving from the egg to its first birthday is only 19 For females the annual survival rate rises to 45 for juveniles and 95 for adults The male survival rates follow a similar pattern but are probably lower overall than females as evidenced by the average male age being lower than that of the female 105 Natural disasters can confound age distributions For instance a hurricane can destroy many nests in a region resulting in fewer hatchlings the next year 105 Age distributions may also be skewed by migrations of adults 104 To understand painted turtle adult age distributions researchers require reliable methods 106 Turtles younger than four years up to 12 years in some populations can be aged based on growth rings in their shells 107 For older turtles some attempts have been made to determine age based on size and shape of their shells or legs using mathematical models but this method is more uncertain 107 108 The most reliable method to study the long lived turtles is to capture them permanently mark their shells by notching with a drill release the turtles and then recapture them in later years 109 110 The longest running study in Michigan has shown that painted turtles can live more than 55 years 107 111 Adult sex ratios of painted turtle populations average around 1 1 112 Many populations are slightly male heavy but some are strongly female imbalanced one population in Ontario has a female to male ratio of 4 1 113 Hatchling sex ratio varies based on egg temperature During the middle third of incubation temperatures of 23 27 C 73 81 F produce males and anything above or below that females 114 It does not appear that females choose nesting sites to influence the sex of the hatchlings 54 within a population nests will vary sufficiently to give both male and female heavy broods 104 Ecology editDiet edit The painted turtle is a bottom dwelling hunter It quickly juts its head into and out of vegetation to stir potential victims out into the open water where they are pursued Large prey is ripped apart with the forefeet as the turtle holds it in its mouth It also consumes plants and skims the surface of the water with its mouth open to catch small particles of food 115 Although all subspecies of painted turtle eat both plants and animals in the form of leaves algae fish crustaceans aquatic insects and carrion their specific diets vary 116 117 118 Young painted turtles are mostly carnivorous and as they mature they become more herbivorous 119 Painted turtles obtain coloration from carotenoids in their natural diet by eating algae and a variety of aquatic plants from their environment Stripes and spots increase red and yellow chroma and decrease UV chroma and brightness in turtles with large amounts of carotenoids in their diet compared to the stripes and spots of turtles with only moderate amounts of carotenoids in their diet 120 The eastern painted turtle s diet is the least studied It prefers to eat in the water but has been observed eating on land The fish it consumes are typically dead or injured 118 The midland painted turtle eats mostly aquatic insects and both vascular and non vascular plants 121 The western painted turtle s consumption of plants and animals changes seasonally In early summer 60 of its diet comprises insects In late summer 55 includes plants 122 Of note the western painted turtle aids in the dispersal of white water lily seeds The turtle consumes the hard coated seeds which remain viable after passing through the turtle and disperses them through its feces 122 Common foods of the painted turtle nbsp Crayfish nbsp Dragonfly larva nbsp American water lily nbsp Duckweed water surface Predators edit Painted turtles are most vulnerable to predators when young 103 Nests are frequently ransacked and the eggs eaten by garter snakes crows chipmunks thirteen lined ground and gray squirrels skunks groundhogs raccoons badgers gray and red fox and humans 103 The small and sometimes bite size numerous hatchlings fall prey to water bugs bass catfish bullfrogs snapping turtles three types of snakes copperheads racers and water snakes herons rice rats weasels muskrats minks and raccoons As adults the turtles armored shells protect them from many potential predators but they still occasionally fall prey to alligators ospreys crows red shouldered hawks bald eagles and especially raccoons 103 Painted turtles defend themselves by kicking scratching biting or urinating 103 In contrast to land tortoises painted turtles can right themselves if they are flipped upside down 123 Important predators of the painted turtleOf eggs nbsp Red fox nbsp Plains garter snake nbsp Crows Of hatchlings nbsp Common snapping turtle nbsp Water scorpion Of adults nbsp RaccoonLife cycle editMating edit nbsp Male southern painted turtle shows his long front claws nbsp Female painted turtleThe painted turtles mate in spring and fall in waters of 10 25 C 50 77 F 98 Males start producing sperm in early spring when they can bask to an internal temperature of 17 C 63 F 124 125 Females begin their reproductive cycles in mid summer and ovulate the following spring 114 Courtship begins when a male follows a female until he meets her face to face 113 He then strokes her face and neck with his elongated front claws a gesture returned by a receptive female The pair repeat the process several times with the male retreating from and then returning to the female until she swims to the bottom where they copulate 114 113 As the male is smaller than the female he is not dominant 113 Although not directly observed evidence indicates that the male will inflict injury on the female in attempts of coercion 126 Males will use their tooth like cusps on their beaks and their foreclaws during this act of coercion with the female 127 The female stores sperm to be used for up to three clutches in her oviducts the sperm may remain viable for up to three years 128 A single clutch may have multiple fathers 128 Egg laying edit Nesting is done by the females only between late May and mid July 114 The nests are vase shaped and are usually dug in sandy soil often at sites with southern exposures 129 Nests are often within 200 m 220 yd of water but may be as far away as 600 m 660 yd with older females tending to nest further inland Nest sizes vary depending on female sizes and locations but are about 5 11 cm 2 4 in deep 129 Females may return to the same sites several consecutive years but if several females make their nests close together the eggs become more vulnerable to predators 129 Female eastern painted turtles have been shown to nest together possibly even participating in communal nesting 130 nbsp Female digging a nestThe female s optimal body temperature while digging her nest is 29 30 C 84 86 F 129 If the weather is unsuitable for instance a too hot night in the Southeast she delays the process until later at night 129 Painted turtles in Virginia have been observed waiting three weeks to nest because of a hot drought 131 While preparing to dig her nest the female sometimes exhibits a mysterious preliminary behavior She presses her throat against the ground of different potential sites perhaps sensing moisture warmth texture or smell although her exact motivation is unknown She may further temporize by excavating several false nests 129 as the wood turtles also do 132 The female relies on her hind feet for digging She may accumulate so much sand and mud on her feet that her mobility is reduced making her vulnerable to predators To lighten her labors she lubricates the area with her bladder water 129 Once the nest is complete the female deposits into the hole The freshly laid eggs are white elliptical porous and flexible 133 From start to finish the female s work may take four hours Sometimes she remains on land overnight afterwards before returning to her home water 129 Females can lay five clutches per year but two is a normal average after including the 30 50 of a population s females that do not produce any clutches in a given year 129 In some northern populations no females lay more than one clutch per year 129 Bigger females tend to lay bigger eggs and more eggs per clutch 134 Clutch sizes of the subspecies vary although the differences may reflect different environments rather than different genetics The two more northerly subspecies western and midland are larger and have more eggs per clutch 11 9 and 7 6 respectively than the eastern 4 9 Within subspecies also the more northerly females lay larger clutches 129 Growth edit nbsp Hatchlings nbsp A painted turtle hatching with an egg tooth Incubation lasts 72 80 days in the wild 114 and for a similar period in artificial conditions 131 In August and September the young turtle breaks out from its egg using a special projection of its jaw called the egg tooth 63 Not all offspring leave the nest immediately though 114 Hatchlings north of a line from Nebraska to northern Illinois to New Jersey 135 typically arrange themselves symmetrically 136 in the nest and overwinter to emerge the following spring 114 The hatchling s ability to survive winter in the nest has allowed the painted turtle to extend its range farther north than any other American turtle The painted turtle is genetically adapted to survive extended periods of subfreezing temperatures with blood that can remain supercooled and skin that resists penetration from ice crystals in the surrounding ground 135 The hardest freezes nevertheless kill many hatchlings 114 Immediately after hatching turtles are dependent on egg yolk material for sustenance 136 About a week to a week and a half after emerging from their eggs or the following spring if emergence is delayed hatchlings begin feeding to support growth The young turtles grow rapidly at first sometimes doubling their size in the first year Growth slows sharply at sexual maturity and may stop completely 137 Likely owing to differences of habitat and food by water body growth rates often differ from population to population in the same area Among the subspecies the western painted turtles are the quickest growers 138 Females grow faster than males overall and must be larger to mature sexually 137 In most populations males reach sexual maturity at 2 4 years old and females at 6 10 125 Size and age at maturity increase with latitude 56 at the northern edge of their range males reach sexual maturity at 7 9 years of age and females at 11 16 113 Behavior editDaily routine and basking edit nbsp Basking for warmthA cold blooded reptile the painted turtle regulates its temperature through its environment notably by basking All ages bask for warmth often alongside other species of turtle Sometimes more than 50 individuals are seen on one log together 139 Turtles bask on a variety of objects often logs but have even been seen basking on top of common loons that were covering eggs 140 The turtle starts its day at sunrise emerging from the water to bask for several hours Warmed for activity it returns to the water to forage 141 After becoming chilled the turtle re emerges for one to two more cycles of basking and feeding 142 At night the turtle drops to the bottom of its water body or perches on an underwater object and sleeps 141 To be active the turtle must maintain an internal body temperature between 17 23 C 63 73 F When fighting infection it manipulates its temperature up to 5 C 8 F higher than normal 139 Seasonal routine and hibernation edit In the spring when the water reaches 15 18 C 59 64 F the turtle begins actively foraging However if the water temperature exceeds 30 C 86 F the turtle will not feed In fall the turtle stops foraging when temperatures drop below the spring set point 117 During the winter the turtle hibernates In the north the inactive season may be as long as from October to March while the southernmost populations may not hibernate at all 99 While hibernating the body temperature of the painted turtle averages 6 C 43 F 143 Periods of warm weather bring the turtle out of hibernation and even in the north individuals have been seen basking in February 144 The painted turtle hibernates by burying itself either on the bottom of a body of water near water in the shore bank or the burrow of a muskrat or in woods or pastures When hibernating underwater the turtle prefers shallow depths no more than 2 m 7 ft Within the mud it may dig down an additional 1 m 3 ft 143 In this state the turtle does not breathe although if surroundings allow it may get some oxygen through its skin 145 The species is one of the best studied vertebrates able to survive long periods without oxygen Adaptations of its blood chemistry brain heart and particularly its shell allow the turtle to survive extreme lactic acid buildup while oxygen deprived 146 Anoxia tolerance edit During the winter months painted turtles become ice locked and spend their time in either hypoxic low oxygen or anoxic no oxygen regions of the pond or lake 147 Painted turtles essentially hold their breath until the following spring when the ice melts As a result painted turtles rely on anaerobic respiration which leads to the production of lactic acid 148 However painted turtles can tolerate long periods of anoxia due to three factors a depressed metabolic rate large glycogen stores in the liver and sequestering lactate in the shell and releasing carbonate buffers to the extracellular fluid 148 The shell of an adult painted turtle has the largest concentration of carbonate content recorded among animals 149 This large carbonate content helps the painted turtle buffer the accumulation of lactic acid during anoxia Both the shell and skeleton release calcium and magnesium carbonates to buffer extracellular lactic acid 150 151 A painted turtle can also sequester 44 of total body lactate in their shell 152 Despite the shell s large buffering contribution it does not experience any significant decrease in mechanical properties under natural conditions 153 The duration of anoxia tolerance varies depending on the sub species of painted turtle The western painted turtle C picta bellii can survive 170 days of anoxia followed by the midland painted turtle C picta marginata which can survive 150 days and finally the eastern painted turtle C picta picta which can survive 125 days 153 154 155 156 Differences in anoxia tolerance are partially attributed to the rate of lactate production and buffering capability in painted turtles 154 Furthermore northern populations of painted turtles have a higher anoxia tolerance than southern populations 154 Other anoxia tolerant freshwater turtles include the southern painted turtle Chrysemys dorsalis which can survive 75 86 days of anoxia the snapping turtle Chelydra serpentina which can survive 100 days under anoxia and the map turtle Graptemys geographica which can survive 50 days of anoxia 154 156 157 158 One reason for the difference in duration between more anoxia tolerant species and less anoxia tolerant species is the turtle s ability to buffer lactic acid accumulation during anoxia 159 Unlike adult painted turtles hatchlings can survive only 40 days but still exhibit high anoxia tolerance and freeze tolerance compared to other hatchling species 30 days for Chelydra serpentina and 15 days for Graptemys geographica due to cold winters 160 161 Movement edit nbsp Moving on landSearching for water food or mates the painted turtles travel up to several kilometers at a time 162 During summer in response to heat and water clogging vegetation the turtles may vacate shallow marshes for more permanent waters 162 Short overland migrations may involve hundreds of turtles together 99 If heat and drought are prolonged the turtles will bury themselves and in extreme cases die 163 Foraging turtles frequently cross lakes or travel linearly down creeks 164 Daily crossings of large ponds have been observed 163 Tag and release studies show that sex also drives turtle movement Males travel the most up to 26 km 16 mi between captures females the second most up to 8 km 5 mi between captures and juveniles the least less than 2 km 1 2 mi between captures 162 Males move the most and are most likely to change wetlands because they seek mates 163 The painted turtles through visual recognition have homing capabilities 162 Many individuals can return to their collection points after being released elsewhere trips that may require them to traverse land One experiment placed 98 turtles varying several kilometer distances from their home wetland 41 returned When living in a single large body of water the painted turtles can home from up to 6 km 4 mi away Another experiment found that if placed far enough away from water the turtles will just walk in straight paths and not orient towards water or in any specific direction which indicates a lack of homing ability 165 Females may use homing to help locate suitable nesting sites 162 Eastern painted turtle movements may contribute to aquatic plant seed dispersal A study done in Massachusetts found that the quantity of intact macrophyte seeds defecated by Eastern painted turtles can be high and that the seeds of specifically Nymphaea ordorata that were found in feces were capable of moderate to high level germination As turtles move between ponds and habitats they carry seeds along with them to new locations 165 Interaction with humans editConservation edit nbsp British Columbia road sign for painted turtle protection Main article Conservation of painted turtles The species is currently classified as least concern by the IUCN but populations have been subject to decline locally 2 The decline in painted turtle populations is not a simple matter of dramatic range reduction like that of the American bison Instead the turtle is classified as G5 demonstrably widespread in its Natural Heritage Global Rank 62 and the IUCN rates it as a species of least concern 3 The painted turtle s high reproduction rate and its ability to survive in polluted wetlands and artificially made ponds have allowed it to maintain its range 46 166 but the post Columbus settlement of North America has reduced its numbers 167 168 Only within the Pacific Northwest is the turtle s range eroding Even there in Washington the painted turtle is designated S5 demonstrably widespread However in Oregon the painted turtle is designated S2 imperiled 169 and in British Columbia the turtle s populations in the Coast and Interior regions are labeled endangered 170 and of special concern respectively 171 nb 6 Much is written about the different factors that threaten the painted turtle but they are unquantified with only inferences of relative importance 103 105 167 A primary threat category is habitat loss in various forms Related to water habitat there is drying of wetlands clearing of aquatic logs or rocks basking sites and clearing of shoreline vegetation which allows more predator access 176 or increased human foot traffic 177 178 Related to nesting habitat urbanization or planting can remove needed sunny soils 179 Another significant human impact is roadkill dead turtles especially females are commonly seen on summer roads 180 In addition to direct killing roads genetically isolate some populations 180 Localities have tried to limit roadkill by constructing underpasses 181 highway barriers 123 and crossing signs 182 Oregon has introduced public education on turtle awareness safe swerving and safely assisting turtles across the road 183 In the West human introduced bass bullfrogs and especially snapping turtles have increased the predation of hatchlings 123 184 Outside the Southeast where sliders are native released pet red eared slider turtles increasingly compete with painted turtles 185 In cities increased urban predators raccoons canines and felines may impact painted turtles by eating their eggs 176 Other factors of concern for the painted turtles include over collection from the wild 186 released pets introducing diseases 187 or reducing genetic variability 185 pollution 188 boating traffic angler s hooks the turtles are noteworthy bait thieves wanton shooting and crushing by agricultural machines or golf course lawnmowers or all terrain vehicles 189 190 191 Gervais and colleagues note that research itself impacts the populations and that much funded turtle trapping work has not been published They advocate discriminating more on what studies are done thereby putting fewer turtles into scientists traps 192 Global warming represents an uncharacterized future threat 168 193 As the most common turtle in Nova Scotia the eastern painted turtle is not listed under the Species at Risk Act for conservation requirements 194 source source source source source source Oregon conservation video If video play problematic try external links within citations 195 196 Note list of factors at 0 30 0 60 and hoop trap at 1 50 2 00 Pets and other uses edit we do not necessarily encourage people to collect these turtles Turtles kept as pets usually soon become ill The best way to enjoy our native turtles is to observe them in the wild it would be better to take a picture than a picta Pennsylvania Fish and Boat Commission 78 According to a trade data study painted turtles were the second most popular pet turtles after red eared sliders in the early 1990s 197 As of 2010 most U S states allow but discourage painted turtle pets although Oregon forbids keeping them as pets 198 and Indiana prohibits their sale 187 U S federal law prohibits sale or transport of any turtle less than 10 cm 4 in to limit human contact to salmonella 199 However a loophole for scientific samples allows some small turtles to be sold and illegal trafficking also occurs 184 200 Painted turtle pet keeping requirements are similar to those of the red eared slider Keepers are urged to provide them with adequate space and a basking site and water that is regularly filtered and changed Aquatic turtles are generally unsuitable pets for children as they do not enjoy being held Hobbyists have maintained turtles in captivity for decades 201 202 203 Painted turtles are long lived pets and have a lifespan of up to 40 years in captivity The painted turtle is sometimes eaten but is not highly regarded as food 167 204 205 as even the largest subspecies the western painted turtle is inconveniently small and larger turtles are available 206 Schools frequently dissect painted turtles which are sold by biological supply companies 207 specimens often come from the wild but may be captive bred 208 In the Midwest turtle racing is popular at summer fairs 207 209 210 Capture edit Main article Capture of painted turtles Commercial harvesting of painted turtles in the wild is controversial and increasingly restricted 211 212 Wisconsin formerly had virtually unrestricted trapping of painted turtles but based on qualitative observations forbade all commercial harvesting in 1997 213 Neighboring Minnesota where trappers collected more than 300 000 painted turtles during the 1990s 180 commissioned a study of painted turtle harvesting 207 Scientists found that harvested lakes averaged half the painted turtle density of off limit lakes and population modeling suggested that unrestricted harvests could produce a large decline in turtle populations 186 In response Minnesota forbade new harvesters in 2002 and limited trap numbers Although harvesting continued 186 subsequent takes averaged half those of the 1990s 214 In 2023 Minnesota banned the practice of commercial turtle trapping 215 As of 2009 painted turtles faced virtually unlimited harvesting in Arkansas Iowa Missouri Ohio and Oklahoma 216 since then Missouri has prohibited their harvesting 217 nbsp Basking trap in MinnesotaIndividuals who trap painted turtles typically do so to earn additional income 186 211 selling a few thousand a year at 1 2 each 207 Many trappers have been involved in the trade for generations and value it as a family activity 213 Some harvesters disagree with limiting the catch saying the populations are not dropping 213 Many U S state fish and game departments allow non commercial taking of painted turtles under a creel limit and require a fishing sometimes hunting license nb 7 others completely forbid the recreational capture of painted turtles Trapping is not allowed in Oregon where western painted turtle populations are in decline 222 and in Missouri where there are populations of both southern and western subspecies 217 In Canada Ontario protects both subspecies present the midland and western 223 and British Columbia protects its dwindling western painted turtles 63 Capture methods are also regulated by locality Typically trappers use either floating basking traps or partially submerged baited hoop traps 224 Trapper opinions 224 commercial records 214 and scientific studies 224 225 226 show that basking traps are more effective for collecting painted turtles while the hoop traps work better for collecting meat turtles snapping turtles and soft shell turtles Nets hand capture and fishing with set lines are generally legal but shooting chemicals and explosives are forbidden nb 8 Culture edit Whereas the Painted Turtle is a hard worker and can withstand cold temperatures like the citizens of Vermont and Whereas the colors of the Painted Turtle represent the beauty of our state in autumn the General Assembly hereby recognizes the Painted Turtle as the official state reptile Vermont J R S 57 227 Native American tribes were familiar with the painted turtle young braves were trained to recognize its splashing into water as an alarm and incorporated it in folklore 228 A Potawatomi myth describes how the talking turtles Painted Turtle and allies Snapping Turtle and Box Turtle outwit the village women Painted Turtle is the star of the legend and uses his distinctive markings to trick a woman into holding him so he can bite her 229 An Illini myth recounts how Painted Turtle put his paint on to entice a chief s daughter into the water 230 As of 2010 four U S states designated the painted turtle as official reptile Vermont honored the reptile in 1994 following the suggestion of Cornwall Elementary School students 227 In 1995 Michigan followed based on the recommendation of Niles fifth graders who discovered the state lacked an official reptile 231 On February 2 2005 Representative Bob Biggins introduced a bill to make the tiger salamander the official state amphibian of Illinois and to make the painted turtle the official state reptile The bill was signed into law by Governor Rod Blagojevich on July 19 2005 232 Colorado chose the western painted turtle in 2008 following the efforts of two succeeding years of Jay Biachi s fourth grade classes 233 In New York the painted turtle narrowly lost 5 048 to 5 005 versus the common snapping turtle a 2006 statewide student election for state reptile 234 nbsp Tommy the TurtleIn the border town of Boissevain Manitoba a 10 000 lb 4 500 kg western painted turtle Tommy the Turtle is a roadside attraction The statue was built in 1974 to celebrate the Canadian Turtle Derby a festival including turtle races that ran from 1972 to 2001 235 Another Canadian admirer of the painted turtle is Jon Montgomery who won the 2010 Olympic gold medal in skeleton a form of sled racing while wearing a painted turtle painting on the crown of his helmet prominently visible when he slid downhill Montgomery who also iconically tattooed his chest with a maple leaf 236 explained his visual promotion of the turtle saying that he had assisted one to cross the road BC Hydro referred to Montgomery s action when describing its own sponsorship of conservation research for the turtle in British Columbia 237 Several private entities use the painted turtle as a symbol Wayne State University Press operates an imprint named after the Michigan state reptile that publishes books on regional topics of cultural and historical interest 238 In California The Painted Turtle is a camp for ill children founded by Paul Newman Painted Turtle Winery of British Columbia trades on the laid back and casual lifestyle of the turtle with a job description to bask in the sun 239 Also there is an Internet company in Michigan 240 a guesthouse in British Columbia 241 and a cafe in Maine that use the painted turtle commercially 242 In children s books the painted turtle is a popular subject with at least seven books published between 2000 and 2010 nb 9 Notes and references editNotes edit Bishop and Schmidt alluded to glacial origins even earlier 30 All turtle lengths in this article refer to the top shell carapace length not the extended head to tail length The range description and map primarily rely on Conant and Collins 1998 and Ernst and Lovich have a similar range map 29 Additional citations and notes cover details of range boundaries especially in the West Vancouver Island painted turtle populations may have resulted from escaped pets 63 See the following sources 22 66 67 68 69 The iconic painted turtle is popular in British Columbia and the province is spending to save the painted turtle as only a few thousand turtles remain in the entire province 172 173 174 175 State fish and game creel limits 73 190 191 218 219 220 221 State fish and game taking restrictions 73 190 191 219 220 221 2000 2010 children s books on the painted turtle 243 244 245 246 247 248 249 Citations edit a b Ernst amp Lovich 2009 pp 184 185 a b Chrysemys picta IUCN Red List of Threatened Species Retrieved 2013 10 19 a b c d e f Rhodin et al 2010 p 000 99 a b Mann 2007 p 6 a b c Ercelawn Aliya Taxonomic information Herpetology Species Page Prof Theodora Pinou Western Connecticut State University Biological and Environmental Sciences Department Retrieved 2011 02 06 Fritz Uwe Peter Havas 2007 Checklist of Chelonians of the World Vertebrate Zoology 57 2 177 179 doi 10 3897 vz 57 e30895 S2CID 87809001 Cosentino Bradley September 11 2010 Wetland hydrology area and isolation influence occupancy and spatial turnover of the painted turtle Chrysemys picta Landscape Ecology 25 10 1589 1600 doi 10 1007 s10980 010 9529 3 S2CID 38488888 Gibbons J Whitfield 1968 Population Structure and Survivorship in the Painted Turtle Chrysemys picta Copeia 1968 2 260 268 doi 10 2307 1441752 ISSN 0045 8511 JSTOR 1441752 Grosse Andrew 1 September 2010 Effects of turbidity on the foraging success of the eastern painted turtle Copeia 2010 3 463 467 doi 10 1643 CE 09 162 S2CID 83648930 Rhodin et al 2010 pp 000 91 000 99 Carr 1952 p 214 Taxonomy chapter for turtle eastern painted 030060 BOVA Booklet Virginia Fish and Wildlife Information Service 2010 Retrieved 2010 12 17 Beltz Ellin 2006 Scientific and common names of the reptiles and amphibians of North America explained Retrieved 2010 12 13 Beolens Bo Watkins Michael Grayson Michael 2011 The Eponym Dictionary of Reptiles Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press xiii 296 pp ISBN 978 1 4214 0135 5 Chrysemys picta belli p 22 Hoffman Richard L March 1987 Skilpot a request for information PDF Virginia Herpetological Society Bulletin 85 Archived from the original PDF on 2011 07 17 Retrieved 2010 12 06 When I was a child living in Clifton Forge VA the name by which I learned Chrysemys picta painted turtle was skilpot a b Schneider Johann Gotttlob 1783 Allgemeine naturgeschichte der schildkroten Gothic script in German Leipzig J G Muller p 348 Retrieved 2011 02 08 unter dem namen Testudo picta a b c Fritz amp Havas 2007 p 177 Gray John Edward 1831 A synopsis of the species of the class reptilia In Griffith Edward ed The Animal Kingdom Arranged in Conformity with Its Organization The class reptilia with specific descriptions volume 9 London Whittikar Treacher p 12 Retrieved 2011 07 20 Fritz amp Havas 2007 p 178 Agassiz Louis 1857 Contributions to the natural history of the United States of America First monograph in three parts Boston Little Brown pp 439 440 Retrieved 2011 07 20 agassiz a b Rhodin Anders G J 2021 11 15 Turtles of the World Annotated Checklist and Atlas of Taxonomy Synonymy Distribution and Conservation Status 9th Ed Chelonian Research Monographs Vol 8 Chelonian Research Foundation and Turtle Conservancy doi 10 3854 crm 8 checklist atlas v9 2021 ISBN 978 0 9910368 3 7 S2CID 244279960 a b Lee Sasser Marisa December 2007 Painted turtle in Alabama Alabama Department of Conservation and Natural Resources Archived from the original on 2010 08 30 Retrieved 2010 08 12 Intergrades exhibit a mix of characteristics where their ranges overlap a b c Senneke Darrell 2003 Differentiating painted turtles Chrysemys picta ssp World Chelonian Trust Retrieved 2010 12 09 Eastern painted turtle Chrysemys picta picta Schneider Nova Scotia Museum 2007 Archived from the original on 2010 12 29 Retrieved 2010 09 29 Midland painted turtle Chrysemys picta marginata Natural Resources Canada 2007 09 24 Archived from the original on April 21 2009 Retrieved 2010 09 29 a b c Ernst amp Lovich 2009 p 187 a b Carr 1952 p 221 Record setting Painted Western Turtle found in Regina CBC News a b c d e f g h i j k l Ernst amp Lovich 2009 p 185 a b Bishop Sherman Schmidt F J W 1931 The painted turtles of the genus Chrysemys Zoological Series Field Museum of Natural History 18 4 123 139 Retrieved 2011 01 06 a b c Bleakney Sherman 1958 07 23 Postglacial dispersal of the turtle Chrysemys picta Herpetologica 14 2 101 104 JSTOR 3889448 subscription required Carr 1952 p 213 Holman J Alan September 1977 Comments on turtles of the genus Chrysemys Gray Herpetologica 33 3 274 276 JSTOR 3891939 subscription required Ernst amp Barbour 1989 p 203 Chrysemys dorsalis The Reptile Database Retrieved 2022 03 28 Williams Robert W 2007 12 17 Mass grave from the remote past also avail as pdf Norwegian Continental Shelf Norwegian Petroleum Directorate 2007 3 Retrieved 2011 02 08 Dobie James L 1981 1982 The taxonomic relationship between Malaclemys Gray 1844 and Graptemys agassiz 1857 Testudines Emydidae Tulane Studies in Zoology and Botany 23 85 103 Retrieved 2011 01 04 a b c d Ernst Barbour amp Lovich 1994 p 276 Bickham John W Carr John L 14 December 1983 Taxonomy and Phylogeny of the Higher Categories of Cryptodiran Turtles Based on a Cladistic Analysis of Chromosomal Data Copeia 1983 4 918 932 doi 10 2307 1445093 JSTOR 1445093 S2CID 29543729 as cited in Mann 2007 p 10 Killebrew F C 1977 Mitotic chromosomes of turtles IV The Emydidae Texas Journal of Science 24 249 253 INIST PASCAL7850376068 NAID 20001602985 as cited in Mann 2007 p 10 Killebrew Flavius C 1975 07 28 Mitotic chromosomes of turtles I The Pelomedusidae Journal of Herpetology 9 3 282 285 doi 10 2307 1563192 JSTOR 1563192 a b Mann 2007 p 11 Waters J H 1969 Additional observations of Southeastern Massachusetts insular and Copeia 1 1 179 182 doi 10 2307 1441709 JSTOR 1441709 as cited in Mann 2007 p 11 Gervais et al 2009 p 22 Approved sequencing targets National Human Genome Research Institutes National Institutes of Health Archived from the original on 2012 07 27 Retrieved 2011 02 14 a b c d Ercelawn Aliya Species identification Herpetology Species Page Prof Theodora Pinou Western Connecticut State University Biology and Environmental Sciences Retrieved 2011 02 06 a b Painted turtle Chrysemys picta Savannah River Ecology Laboratory Herpetology Program Retrieved 2010 09 18 a b c Ernst amp Lovich 2009 p 184 Cohen Mary October 1992 The painted turtle Chrysemys picta Tortuga Gazette 28 10 1 3 Retrieved 2011 01 05 Ernst amp Lovich 2009 p 263 Reptiles Turtle amp tortoise Animal Bytes Archived from the original on 2010 12 06 Retrieved 2011 01 02 Turtle Spends most of its life in the water Turtles tend to have webbed feet for swimming Painted turtle US Bureau of Land Management Archived from the original on June 24 2012 Retrieved 2011 01 02 They have webbed toes for swimming Ernst Barbour amp Lovich 1994 p 277 a b Ernst Barbour amp Lovich 1994 p 291 Ernst amp Barbour 1972 p 143 a b Ernst amp Lovich 2009 p 197 Jolliceur Pierre Mosimann James E 1960 Size and shape variation in the painted turtle A principal component analysis PDF Growth 24 339 354 PMID 13790416 Archived from the original PDF on 2011 07 20 Retrieved 2011 02 09 The Science Behind Algonquin s Animals Research Projects Painted Turtle Archived from the original on 2007 10 11 Retrieved 2009 10 09 Rowe John W 1997 07 01 Growth rate body size sexual dimorphism and morphometric variation in four populations of painted turtles Chrysemys picta bellii from Nebraska American Midland Naturalist 138 1 174 188 doi 10 2307 2426664 JSTOR 2426664 Senneke Darrell 2003 Differentiating male and female Chrysemys picta painted turtle World Chelonian Trust Retrieved 2011 02 07 Painted Turtle vs Red eared Slider a b Gervais et al 2009 p 5 a b c d Blood Donald A Macartney Malcolm March 1998 Painted turtle PDF Wildlife Branch Ministry of Environment Lands and Parks British Columbia Archived from the original brochure on January 7 2010 a b c d e f g Conant Roger Collins Joseph T 1998 Field guide to reptiles and amphibians of eastern and central North America New York Houghton Mifflin Harc pp 185 186 ISBN 978 0 395 90452 7 Eastern painted turtle Chrysemys picta picta Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries 2004 03 12 Retrieved 2017 10 06 Wright Katherine M Andrews James S 2002 Painted turtles Chrysemys picta of Vermont An examination of phenotypic variation and intergradation Northeastern Naturalist Humboldt Field Research Institute 9 4 363 380 doi 10 1656 1092 6194 2002 009 0363 PTCPOV 2 0 CO 2 S2CID 85941615 a b Weller Wayne F Hecnar Stephen J Hecnar Darlene R Casper Gary S Dawson F Neil 2010 Quantitative assessment of intergradation between two subspecies of painted turtles Chrysemys picta bellii and C p marginata in the Algoma district of west central Ontario Canada PDF Herpetological Conservation and Biology 5 2 166 173 Mann 2007 p 20 Ultsch Gordon R Ward G Milton LeBerte Chere M Kuhajda Bernard R Stewart E Ray 2001 Intergradation and origins of subspecies of the turtle Chrysemys picta morphological comparisons Canadian Journal of Zoology 79 3 485 498 doi 10 1139 z01 001 Eastern painted turtle New Hampshire Fish and Game Department Retrieved 2017 10 06 Hunter Malcolm L Calhoun Aram J K McCollough Mark 1999 Maine amphibians and reptiles University of Maine Press ISBN 978 0 89101 096 8 as cited by Amphibians and reptiles PDF Damariscotta Lake Watershed Association Retrieved 2011 02 10 Carr 1952 p 215 a b c Nongame species protected by Alabama regulations Alabama Division of Wildlife and Freshwater Fisheries Archived from the original on 2017 09 21 Retrieved 2017 09 21 Pugh F Harvey Pugh Margaret B 1968 07 31 The systematic status of painted turtles Chrysemys in the northeastern United States Copeia 1968 1 612 618 doi 10 2307 1442033 JSTOR 1442033 DeGraaf Richard M Yamasaki Mariko 2000 New England wildlife habitat natural history and distribution Lebanon New Hampshire University Press of New England p 52 ISBN 978 0 87451 957 0 In New England there are no midland populations per se Individuals are part of an intergrade swarm Green N Baynard Pauley Thomas K 1987 Amphibians and reptiles in West Virginia University of Pittsburgh Press ISBN 978 0 8229 5802 4 as cited in Mann p 18 Ernst Carl H 1970 05 29 The status of the painted turtle Chrysemys picta in Tennessee and Kentucky Journal of Herpetology 4 1 39 45 doi 10 2307 1562701 JSTOR 1562701 a b Shiels Andrew L A picta worth a thousand words Portrait of a painted turtle PDF Pennsylvania Angler and Boater catalog Pennsylvania Fish and Boating Commission pp 28 30 Retrieved 2017 10 06 Ernst amp Lovich 2009 p 186 MacCulloch R D and D M Secoy 1983 Demography growth and food of western painted turtles Chrysemys picta bellii Gray from southern Saskatchewan Canadian Journal of Zoology 61 7 1499 1509 doi 10 1139 z83 202 a b c d e f g Stebbins Robert C Peterson Roger Tory 2003 A field guide to western reptiles and amphibians Peterson field guide New York Houghton Mifflin Harcourt pp 251 252 ISBN 978 0 395 98272 3 Retrieved 2011 01 08 a b COSEWIC 2006 pp 6 8 Species of turtles in OK Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation Archived from the original on 2011 05 25 Retrieved 2011 07 21 Painted turtle Chrysemys picta Montana field guides Montana Fish Wildlife and Parks Retrieved 2011 02 11 Western painted turtle Chrysemys picta belli PDF Wyoming conservation strategy Wyoming Game and Fish Department pp 430 431 Archived from the original PDF on November 6 2004 Retrieved 2011 02 11 Cossel John 1997 Chrysemys picta Painted Turtle Idaho Museum of Natural History Idaho State University Retrieved 6 October 2017 Hallock L A McAllister K R 2005 02 01 Painted turtle Washington herp atlas Washington Department of Natural Resources Archived from the original on 2017 03 02 Retrieved 2017 10 06 Gervais et al 2009 pp 26 31 Painted turtle Species profiles Colorado Division of Wildlife Retrieved 2017 10 06 a b Degenhardt William G Painter Charles W Price Andrew H 1996 Amphibians and reptiles of New Mexico University of New Mexico Press p 100 ISBN 0 8263 1695 6 Retrieved 2011 01 03 extreme Northern Chihuahua Mexico Dixon James Ray 2000 painted turtle amp pg PA196 Amphibians and reptiles of Texas Texas A amp M University Press p 196 ISBN 978 0 89096 920 5 Retrieved 2011 01 14 Dotson P Painted turtle Utah Department of Natural Resources Archived from the original on 2012 03 10 Retrieved 2011 02 11 Utah GAP analysis painted turtle Utah Department of Natural Resources Archived from the original on 2012 03 10 Retrieved 2011 02 11 a b Arizona game and fish department PDF Unpublished abstract compiled and edited by the Heritage Data Management System Arizona Game and Fish Department Phoenix AZ 2007 02 22 Archived from the original PDF on 2010 12 30 Chrysemys picta belli occurrences in Arizona Arizona Game and Fish Department 2007 07 22 Archived from the original on 2011 03 20 Retrieved 2011 02 11 Smith Hobart M Taylor Edward H 1950 An annotated checklist and key to the reptiles of Mexico exclusive of the snakes Vol 199 Smithsonian Institution pp 33 34 Retrieved 2011 01 08 Recorded only from the state of Chihuahua Rio Santa Maria near Progreso a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Tanner Wilmer W July 1987 Lizards and turtles of western Chihuahua linked pdf Great Basin Naturalist 47 3 383 421 Retrieved 2011 01 09 Rio Santa Maria above bridge west of Galeana a b c Ernst amp Barbour 1989 p 202 a b c Carr 1952 p 217 Marchand K A Somers C M amp Poulin R G 2019 Spatial ecology and multi scale habitat selection by western painted turtles chrysemys picta bellii in an urban area Canadian Field Naturalist 132 2 108 119 doi 10 22621 cfn v132i2 2036 Carr 1952 p 226 Carr 1952 p 231 a b c d e f Ernst Barbour amp Lovich 1994 p 294 a b c Ernst Barbour amp Lovich 1994 p 295 a b c Ernst amp Lovich 2009 p 211 Gibbons J Whitfield May 1987 Why do turtles live so long PDF BioScience 37 4 262 269 doi 10 2307 1310589 JSTOR 1310589 Archived from the original PDF on March 17 2012 a b c Zweifel Richard George 1989 Long term ecological studies on a population of painted turtles Chrysemys picta on Long Island New York American Museum Novitates no 2952 PDF New York American Museum of Natural History pp 18 20 Fowle Suzanne C 1996 Effects of roadkill mortality on the western painted turtle Chrysemys picta belli in the Mission valley western Montana PDF In Evink G Zeigler D Garrett P Berry J eds Highways and movement of wildlife improving habitat connections and wildlife passageways across highway corridors Proceedings of the transportation related wildlife mortality seminar of the Florida Department of Transportation and the Federal Highway Administration Report FHWA PD 96 041 Florida Department of Transportation Orlando pp 205 223 Archived from the original PDF on 2011 07 23 Retrieved 2011 07 20 Cagle Fred R 1939 09 09 A system of marking turtles for future identification Copeia 1939 3 170 173 doi 10 2307 1436818 JSTOR 1436818 A system to be used in marking turtles must be permanent since turtles have a long life span must definitely identify each individual must not handicap the turtle in any way and should be simple and easy to use subscription required Macartney M Gregory P T 1985 The western painted turtle in Kikomun Creek Provincial Park report as cited in Inventory methods for pond breeding amphibians and painted turtle Ministry of Environment British Columbia 1998 03 18 3 1 3 Marking and identification Archived from the original on 2017 10 06 Retrieved 2017 10 06 Congdon Justin D Nagle Roy D Kinney Owen M van Loben Sels Richard C et al 2003 Testing hypotheses of aging in long lived painted turtles Chrysemys picta PDF Experimental Gerontology 38 7 765 772 doi 10 1016 S0531 5565 03 00106 2 PMID 12855285 S2CID 12556383 Archived from the original PDF on 2011 07 26 Ernst Barbour amp Lovich 1994 pp 294 295 a b c d e Painted turtle research in Algonquin provincial park The Friends of Algonquin Park 2005 Archived from the original on 2007 10 11 Retrieved 2010 09 17 a b c d e f g h Ercelawn Aliya Reproduction Herpetology Species Page Prof Theodora Pinou Western Connecticut State University Biology and Environmental Sciences Retrieved 2011 02 06 Ernst amp Lovich 2009 p 208 Chrysemys picta Painted Turtle Animal Diversity Web a b Ernst amp Lovich 2009 p 293 a b Carr 1952 p 218 Moldowan P D Keevil M G Mills P B Brooks R J amp Litzgus J D 2016 Diet and feeding behaviour of snapping turtles chelydra serpentina and midland painted turtles chrysemys picta marginata in algonquin provincial park ontario Canadian Field Naturalist 129 4 403 408 doi 10 22621 cfn v129i4 1764 Steffen John E Hultberg Jessica Drozda Stephen March 2019 The effect of dietary carotenoid increase on painted turtle spot and stripe color Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part B Biochemistry and Molecular Biology 229 10 17 doi 10 1016 j cbpb 2018 12 002 PMID 30557612 S2CID 56174183 Carr 1952 pp 232 233 a b Carr 1952 p 223 a b c Chaney Rob 2010 07 01 Painted native Turtles indigenous to western Montana have vivid designs secrets Missoulian Retrieved 2010 12 08 Ernst Barbour amp Lovich 1994 p 289 a b Ernst Barbour amp Lovich 1994 p 287 Moldowan P D Brooks R J Litzgus J D 2020 Demographics of injuries indicate sexual coercion in a population of Painted Turtles Chrysemys picta Canadian Journal of Zoology 98 4 269 278 doi 10 1139 cjz 2019 0238 S2CID 214093193 Moldowan Patrick D Brooks Ronald J Litzgus Jacqueline D 10 November 2020 Sex shells and weaponry coercive reproductive tactics in the painted turtle Chrysemys picta Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 74 12 142 doi 10 1007 s00265 020 02926 w ProQuest 2471612605 a b Ernst amp Lovich 2009 p 200 a b c d e f g h i j k Ernst amp Lovich 2009 p 201 Kell S J Rollinson N Brooks R J Litzgus J D 2022 Nesting in close quarters causes and benefits of high density nesting behaviour in Painted Turtles Chrysemys picta Canadian Journal of Zoology 100 3 208 218 doi 10 1139 cjz 2021 0159 hdl 1807 110108 S2CID 245850021 a b Ernst Barbour amp Lovich 1994 p 290 Ernst amp Lovich 2009 p 259 Ernst amp Lovich 2009 p 203 Ernst amp Lovich 2009 p 202 a b Packard et al 2002 p 300 a b Ernst amp Lovich 2009 p 206 a b Ernst Barbour amp Lovich 1994 p 292 Ernst amp Lovich 2009 p 207 a b Ernst Barbour amp Lovich 1994 p 283 Gervais et al 2009 p 13 a b Ernst Barbour amp Lovich 1994 p 282 Ernst Barbour amp Lovich 1994 pp 282 283 a b Ernst Barbour amp Lovich 1994 p 284 Ernst Barbour amp Lovich 1994 p 281 Jackson D C Rauer E M Feldman R A Reese S A August 2004 Avenues of extrapulmonary oxygen uptake in western painted turtles Chrysemys picta belli at 10 C Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology A 139 2 221 227 doi 10 1016 j cbpb 2004 09 005 PMID 15528171 Jackson Donald C 2002 Hibernating without oxygen physiological adaptations of the painted turtle The Journal of Physiology 543 3 731 737 doi 10 1113 jphysiol 2002 024729 PMC 2290531 PMID 12231634 Jackson D C 2002 Hibernating without Oxygen Physiological Adaptations of the Painted Turtle The Journal of Physiology 543 3 731 737 doi 10 1113 jphysiol 2002 024729 PMC 2290531 PMID 12231634 a b Jackson D C 2000 Living without oxygen lessons from the freshwater turtle Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part A Molecular amp Integrative Physiology 125 3 299 315 doi 10 1016 s1095 6433 00 00160 4 PMID 10794959 Keenan S W Pasteris J D Wang A Warren D E 2019 Heterogeneous bioapatite carbonation in western painted turtles is unchanged after anoxia Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part A Molecular amp Integrative Physiology 233 74 83 doi 10 1016 j cbpa 2019 03 019 PMID 30930203 S2CID 89619510 Jackson D C Crocker C E Ultsch G R 2000 Bone and shell contribution to lactic acid buffering of submerged turtlesChrysemys picta belliiat 3 C American Journal of Physiology Regulatory 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painted turtle Chrysemys picta Physiological and Biochemical Zoology 77 4 619 630 doi 10 1086 383514 PMID 15449233 S2CID 24651637 Reese S A Crocker C E Jackson D C Ultsch G R 2000 The physiology of hibernation among painted turtles the midland painted turtle Chrysemys picta marginata Respiration Physiology 124 1 43 50 doi 10 1016 S0034 5687 00 00188 2 PMID 11084202 a b Ultsch G R Hanley R W Bauman T R 1985 Responses to Anoxia during Simulated Hibernation in Northern and Southern Painted Turtles Ecology 66 2 388 395 doi 10 2307 1940388 JSTOR 1940388 Reese S A Jackson D C Ultsch G R 2002 The Physiology of Overwintering in a Turtle That Occupies Multiple Habitats the Common Snapping Turtle Chelydra serpentina Physiological and Biochemical Zoology 75 5 432 438 doi 10 1086 342802 PMID 12529844 S2CID 32401168 Reese S A Crocker C E Carwile M E Jackson D C Ultsch G R 2001 The physiology of hibernation in common map turtles Graptemys geographica Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part A Molecular amp Integrative Physiology 130 2 331 340 doi 10 1016 S1095 6433 01 00398 1 PMID 11544078 Jackson D C Taylor S E Asare V S Villarnovo D Gall J M Reese S A 2007 Comparative shell buffering properties correlate with anoxia tolerance in freshwater turtles American Journal of Physiology Regulatory Integrative and Comparative Physiology 292 2 R1008 R1015 doi 10 1152 ajpregu 00519 2006 PMID 17008457 S2CID 6911719 Reese S A Ultsch G R Jackson D C 2004 Lactate accumulation glycogen depletion and shell composition of hatchling turtles during simulated aquatic hibernation Journal of Experimental Biology 207 17 3123 doi 10 1242 jeb 207 17 3123 Dinkelacker S A Costanzo J P Lee R E 2005 Anoxia tolerance and freeze tolerance in hatchling turtles Journal of Comparative Physiology B 175 3 209 217 doi 10 1007 s00360 005 0478 0 PMID 15739066 S2CID 12647870 a b c d e Ernst Barbour amp Lovich 1994 p 286 a b c Ernst amp Lovich 2009 p 195 MacCulloch R D and D M Secoy 1983 Movement in a river population of Chrysemys picta bellii in southern Saskatchewan Journal of Herpetology 17 3 283 285 doi 10 2307 1563834 JSTOR 1563834 a b Caldwell I R Nams V O August 2006 A compass without a map tortuosity and orientation of eastern painted turtles Chrysemys picta picta released in unfamiliar territory Canadian Journal of Zoology 84 8 1129 1137 doi 10 1139 z06 102 Painted turtle Chrysemys picta Turtle Conservation Project Archived from the original on 2010 09 22 Retrieved 2010 12 10 a b c Carr 1952 p 228 a b Ernst amp Lovich 2009 pp 23 32 Gervais et al 2009 p 9 Species profile western painted turtle Pacific coast population Species at Risk Public Registry Government of Canada 2010 01 11 Archived from the original on 2013 06 10 Retrieved 2010 11 12 Species profile western painted turtle intermountain Rocky Mountain population Species at Risk Public Registry Government of Canada 2010 01 11 Archived from the original on 2013 06 10 Retrieved 2010 11 12 Carnahan Todd Western painted turtles Habitat Acquisition Trust Archived from the original on 2010 11 02 Retrieved 2010 12 11 B C frogwatch program Painted turtle British Columbia Ministry of Environment Retrieved 2011 07 21 Nilsen Emily 2010 08 09 Protecting the painted turtle Nelson Express Retrieved 2010 12 11 COSEWIC 2006 p 29 a b Gervais et al 2009 p 33 Hayes M P Beilke S G Boczkiewicz S M P B Hendrix P I et al 2002 The western painted turtle Chrysemys picta bellii at the Rivergate industrial district management options and opportunities Report cited in Gervais et al 2009 Leuteritz T E Manson C J 1996 Preliminary observations on the effects of human perturbation on basking behavior in the midland painted turtle Chrysemys picta marginata Bulletin of the Maryland Herpetological Society 32 16 23 cited in Gervais et al 2009 Gervais et al 2009 p 36 a b c Gervais et al 2009 p 34 Gervais et al 2009 p 47 Holmes Dianne Report on turtle crossing signs proposal PDF Region of Ottawa Carleton inexpensive and morally exemplary Kenagy Meg February 2010 On the ground The Oregon conservation strategy at work Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife ODFW Retrieved 2011 01 07 a b Gervais et al 2009 p 35 a b Gervais et al 2009 p 6 a b c d Gamble Tony Simons Andrew M December 2004 Comparison of harvested and nonharvested painted turtle populations Wildlife Society Bulletin 32 4 1269 1277 doi 10 2193 0091 7648 2004 032 1269 COHANP 2 0 CO 2 S2CID 44057147 a b Turtles as pets Indiana Department of Natural Resources Retrieved 2010 12 11 It is illegal in the State of Indiana to sell native species of turtles Gervais et al 2009 pp 36 37 Gervais et al 2009 p 37 a b c Arizona reptile and amphibian regulations PDF Arizona Game and Fish Department Archived from the original PDF on February 8 2006 Retrieved 2011 07 20 a b c Nongame fish reptile amphibian and aquatic invertebrate regulations Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries Archived from the original on 2010 11 11 Retrieved 2010 12 08 Gervais et al 2009 p 40 Gervais et al 2009 p 38 Eastern Painted Turtle Nova Scotia Museum 2017 News and Highlights Video Gallery Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife Dfw state or us 2011 01 26 Retrieved 2011 02 06 Oregon s Native Turtles YouTube Archived from the original on 2021 11 14 Retrieved 2011 02 06 Ernst amp Lovich 2009 p 26 Oregon native turtles PDF Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife Retrieved 2011 07 20 Title 21 CFR 1240 62 U S Food and Drug Administration Retrieved 2010 12 12 Reinberg Steven 2010 03 23 Pet turtles pose salmonella danger to kids They re banned from sale by law but still appear at flea markets pet shops experts say ABC News Retrieved 2010 12 12 Senneke Darrel 2003 Chrysemys picta Painted turtle care PDF World Cheledonian Trust Bartlett R D Bartlett Patricia 2003 Aquatic turtles Sliders cooters painted and map turtles Hong Kong Barron s Educational Series pp 1 48 ISBN 978 0 7641 2278 1 Retrieved 2011 01 05 Choosing a turtle Myturtlecam com Retrieved 2011 01 25 Carr 1952 pp 218 219 Carr 1952 p 233 Carr 1952 p 224 a b c d Gamble Tony Simons Andrew M 2003 05 30 The commercial harvest of painted turtles in Minnesota final report to the Minnesota department of natural resources natural heritage and nongame research program PDF technical report Minnesota Department of Natural Resources Pike Sue 2010 07 21 Painted turtles often used for classroom dissection Seacoast Media Dow Jones wire service Archived from the original on 2012 09 27 Retrieved 2010 12 07 Freeman Eric 2010 06 08 Rupp grandson trap turtles to compete in local races Columbus Telegram Retrieved 2010 12 18 Fast times in Nisswa Swift turtles mix with power shoppers in a Minnesota lake country oasis Midwest Weekends Archived from the original on 2012 07 10 Retrieved 2010 12 18 a b Keen Judith 2009 07 20 States rethink turtle trapping USA Today Retrieved 2010 12 21 Thorbjarnarson J Lageux C L Bolze D Klemens M W et al 2000 Human use of turtles In Klemens M W ed Turtle conservation Washington and London Smithsonian Institution Press pp 33 84 cited in Gamble amp Simons 2004 a b c Arnie Jennifer The turtle trap Imprint Magazine The University of Minnesota Bell Museum of Natural History Archived from the original on 2010 11 19 Retrieved 2010 12 21 a b Minnesota commercial turtle harvest 2012 2013 report Minnesota Department of Natural Resources Retrieved 2017 09 21 Minnesota Bans Commercial Trapping of Wild Turtles Center for Biological Diversity Retrieved 2023 05 30 Southern and midwestern turtle species affected by commercial harvest PDF Center for Biological Diversity Retrieved 2011 07 20 a b MDC discover nature turtles Missouri Department of Conservation Archived from the original on 2017 09 22 Retrieved 2017 09 21 Missouri has 17 kinds of turtles all but three are protected common snapping turtles and two softshells Resident license information and applications packets Alabama Department of Conservation and Natural Resources Archived from the original on 2014 08 18 Retrieved 2010 09 21 a b Regulations on the take of reptiles and amphibians PDF Michigan Department of Natural Resources Retrieved 2011 07 20 a b Summary of Pennsylvania fishing laws and regulations reptiles and amphibians seasons and limits Pennsylvania Fish and Boat Commission Retrieved 2017 09 21 a b Rules and regulations for reptiles and amphibians in New Hampshire New Hampshire Fish and Game Department Retrieved 2017 09 21 Guidance for Conserving Oregon s Native Turtles including Best Management Practices PDF Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife Retrieved 2020 04 30 Hunting regulations 2010 2011 PDF Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources Retrieved 2011 07 20 a b c Gamble Tony 2006 The relative efficiency of basking and hoop traps for painted turtles Chrysemys picta PDF Herpetological Review 37 3 308 312 Archived from the original PDF on 2009 12 22 Browne C L Hecnar S J 2005 Capture success of northern map turtles Graptemys geographica and other turtle species in basking vs baited traps Herpetological Review 36 145 147 cited in Gamble 2006 McKenna K C 2001 Chrysemys picta painted turtle Trapping Herpetological Review 32 184 cited in Gamble 2006 a b Joint resolution relating to the designation of the painted turtle as the state reptile Retrieved 2010 12 15 Macfarlan Allan Macfarlan Paulette 1985 03 01 Handbook of American Indian games Dover Publications p 62 ISBN 978 0 486 24837 0 Potawatomi oral tradition Milwaukee Public Museum Archived from the original on 2010 06 10 Retrieved 2010 12 17 Adapted from Skinner Alanson 1927 Mythology and Folklore The Mascoutens or Prairie Potawatomi Indians Volume 6 Vol 3 Indiana University Board of Trustees Illinois State Museum The painted turtle Retrieved 2010 12 10 As told by an unidentified Peoria informant to Truman Michelson 1916 after Knoepfle 1993 Michigan s state symbols PDF Michigan History Magazine 100 May 2002 Biggins Bob February 2 2005 Bill Status of House Bill 847 State Amphibian Reptile Illinois General Assembly Retrieved June 14 2023 Colorado state archives symbols amp emblems colorado gov State of Colorado Retrieved 2011 01 23 The voting is over Students nominate common snapping turtle as official state reptile Assemblyman Joel M Miller 2006 04 26 Archived from the original on 2012 10 07 Retrieved 2011 02 25 Raynor Paul 2005 12 17 Celebration coins minted and ready Boissevain Recorder Archived from the original on February 13 2006 Retrieved 2011 01 28 Kevin McGran 2010 02 21 Jon Montgomery is the life of Whistler s party Toronto Star Archived from the original on February 24 2010 Retrieved 2010 02 22 BC Hydro plans painted turtle study this summer The Revelstoke Current 2010 02 26 Archived from the original on 2011 07 15 Retrieved 2011 02 04 Painted turtle publishing imprint website Wayne State University Press Archived from the original on October 18 2009 Retrieved 2010 12 07 Painted turtle winery Retrieved 2010 12 07 Painted turtle web design Painted Turtle Web Design Retrieved 2011 01 02 Painted turtle guesthouse website Retrieved 2010 12 06 Staff reports 2010 03 12 Eat amp run The Portland Press Herald Archived from the original on August 7 2011 Retrieved 2010 12 07 Collier Kevin Scott 2010 The Esther Chronicles Collier Kent Scott 2005 04 15 Esther s Channel Baker Tritten ISBN 978 0 9752880 6 1 Hughes Marghanita 2010 Nika and the painted turtle Gillis Jennifer Blizen 2004 10 30 Turtles Pets at my House Heinemann Library ISBN 978 1 4034 5056 2 Hipp Andrew 2005 01 01 The Life Cycle of a Painted Turtle Rosen Classroom ISBN 978 1 4042 5208 0 Falwell Cathryn 2008 02 26 Turtle Splash Countdown at the Pond Greenwillow Books ISBN 978 0 06 142927 9 Chrustowski Rick 2006 Turtle Crossing Henry Hold amp Co ISBN 978 0 8050 7498 7 So the next time you see a Turtle Crossing sign keep your eyes open if you re lucky you just might see a painted turtle on her way to make a nest Bibliography edit Carr Archie 1952 Genus Chrysemys The Painted Turtles Handbook of Turtles The Turtles of the United States Canada and Baja California Binghamton New York Comstock Publishing Associates a Division of Cornell University Press pp 213 234 ISBN 0 8014 8254 2 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Dupuis Linda 2006 COSEWIC assessment and status report on the western painted turtle Chrysemys picta bellii PDF Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada p 29 Ernst Carl H Barbour Roger William 1972 Chrysemys picta Turtles of the United States Lexington Kentucky The University Press of Kentucky pp 138 146 ISBN 0 8131 1272 9 Retrieved 2011 02 08 Ernst Carl H Barbour Roger William 1989 Chrysemys Turtles of the World Washington D C and London Smithsonian Institution Press pp 201 203 ISBN 0 87474 414 8 Retrieved 2011 02 08 Ernst Carl H Barbour Roger William Lovich Jeffery E 1994 Dutro Nancy P ed Turtles of the United States and Canada Washington and London Smithsonian Institution Press pp 276 296 ISBN 1 56098 346 9 Retrieved 2011 02 08 Ernst Carl H Lovich Jeffery E 2009 Turtles of the United States and Canada 2nd ed JHU Press pp 185 259 ISBN 978 0 8018 9121 2 Retrieved 2011 02 08 Fritz Uwe Havas Peter 2007 Checklist of Chelonians of the World Vertebrate Zoology 57 2 149 368 doi 10 3897 vz 57 e30895 S2CID 87809001 Gervais Jennifer Rosenberg Daniel Barnes Susan Puchy Claire Stewart Elaine September 2009 Conservation assessment for the western painted turtle in Oregon Chrysemys picta bellii version 1 1 PDF technical report U S D A Forest Service pp 4 61 Archived from the original PDF on 2011 08 13 Mann Melissa May 2007 A taxonomic study of the morphological variation and intergradation ofChrysemys picta Schneider Emydidae Testudines in West Virginia Master s thesis Marshall University pp i 64 Packard Gary C Packard Mary J Morjan Carrie L Janzen Fredric J 2002 Cold tolerance of hatchling painted turtles Chrysemys picta bellii from the southern limit of distribution PDF Journal of Herpetology 36 2 300 304 doi 10 2307 1566006 JSTOR 1566006 Archived from the original PDF on 2016 03 03 Retrieved 2010 12 13 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link 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 89 000 138 Archived from the original PDF on 2011 07 17 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Chrysemys picta Missouri Department of Conservation video of southern painted turtle click video link Note the discussion of red line on top of shell View the chrPic1 genome assembly in the UCSC Genome Browser Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Painted turtle amp oldid 1204159788, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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