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Yellow-footed tortoise

The yellow-footed tortoise (Chelonoidis denticulatus), also known as the Brazilian giant tortoise,[2] is a species of tortoise in the family Testudinidae and is closely related to the red-footed tortoise (C. carbonarius). It is found in the Amazon Basin of South America. The species name has often been misspelled as denticulata, an error introduced in the 1980s when Chelonoidis was elevated to genus and mistakenly treated as feminine, an error recognized and fixed in 2017.[3]

Yellow-footed tortoise
Yellow-footed tortoise, Yasuni National Park, Ecuador
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Reptilia
Order: Testudines
Suborder: Cryptodira
Superfamily: Testudinoidea
Family: Testudinidae
Genus: Chelonoidis
Species:
C. denticulatus
Binomial name
Chelonoidis denticulatus
(Linnaeus, 1766)
Synonyms[1]
  • Testudo denticulata Linneasus 1766
  • Testudo tabulata Walbaum, 1782(nomen illegitimum)
  • Testudo tessellata Schneider, 1792
  • Testudo tabulata Schoepff, 1793
  • Testudo terrestris americana Schweigger, 1812
  • Testudo terrestris brasiliensis Schweigger, 1812
  • Testudo terrestris var. cayennensis Schweigger, 1812
  • Testudo terrestris surinamensis' Schweigger, 1812
  • Chersine denticulata Merrem, 1820
  • Chersine tessellata Merrem, 1820
  • Testudo cagado Spix, 1824
  • Testudo hercules Spix, 1824
  • Testudo sculpta Spix, 1824
  • Chersine tabulata Gravenhorst, 1829
  • Testudo planata Gmelin, 1831 (nomen nudum)
  • Testudo foveolata Schinz, 1833 (nomen nudum)
  • Geochelone (Chelonoidis) tabulata Fitzinger, 1835
  • Geochelone (Geochelone) denticulata Fitzinger, 1835
  • Chelonoides tabulata Agassiz, 1857
  • Chelonoidis tabulata Agassiz, 1857
  • Chelonoidis denticulata Fróes, 1957
  • Chelonoides denticulata Obst, 1980
  • Geochelone denticulta Richard, 1999 (ex errore)

With an average length of 40 cm (15.75 in) and the largest known specimen at 94 cm (37 in), this is the sixth-largest tortoise species on Earth, after the Galapagos tortoise, the Aldabra tortoise, the African spurred tortoise (Geochelone sulcata, typical size 76 cm (30 in)), the leopard tortoise (Stigmochelys pardalis), and the Asian forest tortoise (Manouria emys emys, typical size 60 cm (23.6 in)).

Taxonomy Edit

The yellow-footed tortoise is also called the yellow-foot or yellow-legged tortoise, the Brazilian giant tortoise, or South American forest tortoise, as well as local names such as morrocoy[what language is this?], woyamou[what language is this?] or wayamo[what language is this?], or some variation of jabuta[what language is this?]. Many of the local names are shared with the similar red-footed tortoise.[4]

Originally, Karl Linnaeus assigned all turtles and tortoises to the genus Testudo and described this species as Testudo denticulata in 1766. Soon the term Testudo was only being used for tortoises as opposed to all chelonians, with tortoises defined by completely terrestrial behaviors, heavy shells, and elephant-like limbs with nails but no visible toes. The species got several other names, as well, for several reasons such as difficulty in distinguishing it from the red-footed, confusion over locations, researchers thinking they had discovered a new species in collections or in the field, etc.

Leopold Fitzinger created the genus Geochelone for medium-to-large tortoises that did not come from the Mediterranean area (which remained Testudo), or have other special characteristics such as the hinged shells of the genus Kinixys. Fitzinger further used the term Chelonoidis as a subgenus to categorize Geochelone from South America. Neither term was widely used until they were resurrected by researchers such as Williams in 1960.[5]

Researchers such as Roger Bour and Charles Crumly separated Geochelone into different genera based largely on their skulls. They created or re-established several genera: Aldabrachelys, Astrochelys, Cylindraspis, Indotestudo, Manouria, and Chelonoidis. The debate is on-going over the definitions and validity of some of these genera. Chelonoidis is primarily defined as being from South America, lacking a nuchal scute (the marginal scute located over the neck) and a large, undivided supracaudal (the scute or scutes directly over the tail).[6]

Chelonoidis is made up of two very different-looking groups: the C. carbonarius group with the yellow-footed and red-footed tortoises; and the C. chilensis group with the Galapagos tortoises (C. niger), Argentine tortoise (C. chilensis), and Chaco tortoise (C. petersi). The taxonomic and evolutionary relationship of these two groups is poorly understood.[7]

Physical characteristics and appearance Edit

 
Yellow-footed tortoise at Parque Zoológico do Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil

Yellow-footed tortoises are a large species – fifth-largest overall and third-largest mainland species, after the Aldabra giant tortoise (Aldabrachelys gigantea), Galapagos giant tortoise (Chelonoidis niger), African spurred tortoise, and Asian forest tortoise. Typical sizes average 40 cm (15.75 in), but much larger specimens are common. The largest known specimen is a female that was 94 cm (37 in) long.[8] They closely resemble the red-footed tortoise, and can sometimes be difficult to tell apart, especially as a preserved specimen, which led to quite a bit of confusion over the names and ranges.

The carapace (shell top) is a long oval with parallel sides and a high-domed back that is generally flat along the vertebrals (scutes or shell scales along the top of the carapace) with a slight peak near the hind end. There are five vertebral scutes, four pairs of costals, eleven pairs of marginals, no nuchal scute (the marginal over the neck) and a large, undivided supracaudal (the marginals over the tail). The front and rear marginals (scutes along the edge of the carapace) are slightly serrated in front and rear of young yellow-footed tortoises. The carapace is yellowish brown to dark brown or even black at the edges of the scutes. The areola in each scute are pale yellow, orange or light brown and blend into the darker carapace.

The plastron (shell bottom) is thick around the edges, and the gulars (front pair of plastron scutes) do not project past the carapace. The plastron is yellow-brown turning nearly black near the seams.

The head is relatively small and longer than wide. The upper jaw has three tooth-like points. There are large black eyes with a tympanum behind each eye. The skin of the head and limbs is black with yellow to orange scales on top and around the eye and ear. The forelimbs have five claws, are long and slightly flattened. They are covered with fine, dark scales and slightly overlapping larger scales on front in the same color as the head. The hind limbs are elephant-like with four claws, and are covered in small scales colored like the forelimbs. The tail varies in length by gender and has a row of colored scales on the sides.[9]

Sexual dimorphism Edit

Adult males average slightly larger than females, but the largest specimens tend to be females. Males develop a distinctive incurving of sides, giving them a well-defined "waist", and a deeply in-curved plastron. The female has a short, conical tail, while the male has a longer, more muscular tail that is generally carried tucked along one side. The anal notch of the male is also larger, presumably to allow better tail mobility.[10]

Natural habitat Edit

There is some disagreement as to which habitat is the preferred type for yellow-footed tortoises. Some feel they prefer grasslands and dry forest areas, and that rain-forest habitat is most likely marginal. Others suggest humid forest is the preferred habitat. Regardless, they are found in drier forest areas, grasslands, and the savanna, or rainforest belts adjoining more open habitats. The red-footed tortoise shares some of its range with the yellow-footed tortoise. In ranges shared in Surinam, the red-footed tortoise has moved out of the forests into grasslands (created a result of slash and burn agriculture), while the yellow-footed tortoise has remained in the forest.

Behavior Edit

These tortoises make a sound like a baby cooing with a raspy voice. Tortoises also identify each other using body language. The male tortoise makes head movements toward other males, but the female does not make these head movements. Male tortoises also swing their heads back and forth in a continuous rhythm as a mating ritual. Mating occurs all year round for the yellow-footed tortoise. There is no parental care of the young and the baby tortoises will fend for themselves, starting by eating calcium-rich plant matter.

Diet Edit

 
At Yasuni National Park, Ecuador

The yellow-footed tortoise eats many kinds of foliage. They are too slow to capture any fast animals. In the wild, their diets consist of grasses, flowers, fallen fruit, carrion, plants, bones, mushrooms, excrement, and slow-moving invertebrates such as snails, worms, and others they are able to capture.[11] In captivity, they are fed oranges, apples, melons, endive, collard greens, dandelions, plantain, ribwort, clover, shredded carrots, insects, worms, cuttlebone, tortoise vitamins, edible flowers, and alfalfa pellets. Each yellow-footed tortoise in the wild reaches the age of maturity at about 8–10 years. The fecundity of a female generally depends on her size; the bigger they are, the more eggs they can produce. On average, a female will create about six to 16 eggs per year, although some female individuals may not reproduce each year. The eggs have brittle shells and are elongated to spherical, about 3–6 cm in diameter. The egg size will increase with the body size of the tortoise. The young are self-sufficient from birth. The yellow-footed tortoise can live around 50–60 years.

Reproduction and growth Edit

Breeding is synchronized with the onset of the rainy season (from July to September), where a general increase in activity is noted. Males identify each other by eliciting a characteristic head movement, a series of jerks away from and back to mid-position. Another male will make the same head movements. No head movement in response is the first indication that the other tortoise is a female. Scientific experimentation and observation has also indicated head coloration has to be correct. He will then sniff the cloacal region of the other tortoise. Copulation usually follows, though sometimes there is a period of biting at the legs. During courtship and copulation, the male makes clucking sounds very much like those of a chicken, with a set pattern in pitches of the clucking sounds. Rival males will battle, attempting to overturn each other, but neither the males nor females will defend a territory. They are considered nomadic in their movements. In almost every tortoise species where male combat occurs, the males are always larger than the females. This is in comparison to aquatic species, where the males are usually smaller than the females and do not engage in male-to-male combat. Species with male combat are thought to have evolved larger males because they have a better chance of winning a bout and mating with a female, thus passing on their larger size to their offspring. Species with smaller males evolved because smaller males are more mobile and can mate with a large number of females, thus passing on their genes.

Conservation status Edit

Chelonoidis denticulatus is an endangered species. The major populations located in South America are protected under the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species, Appendix II.

As with many species of turtles and tortoises, many yellow-footed tortoises end up as food items in local markets.

This species of tortoise is popular in the pet trade.

References Edit

  1. ^ Fritz Uwe; Peter Havaš (2007). "Checklist of Chelonians of the World" (PDF). Vertebrate Zoology. 57 (2): 269–270. ISSN 1864-5755. (PDF) from the original on 1 May 2011. Retrieved 29 May 2012.
  2. ^ "The Brazilian Giant Tortoise by M. A. Cohen" (PDF).
  3. ^ Turtle Taxonomy Working Group (2017). Turtles of the world : Annotated checklist and atlas of taxonomy, synonymy, distribution, and conservation status (8th Ed.) (PDF). New York: Chelonian Research Foundation. ISBN 978-1-5323-5560-8. OCLC 1124067380.
  4. ^ Vinke 2008, p. 31–33
  5. ^ Vinke 2008, p. 16–18
  6. ^ Crumly, Charles (1982). "A cladistic analysis of Geochelone using cranial osteology". Journal of Herpetology. 16 (3): 215–234. doi:10.2307/1563715. JSTOR 1563715.
  7. ^ Vinke 2008, p. 19.
  8. ^ Vinke 2008, p. 99–90.
  9. ^ Vinke 2008, p. 85–87.
  10. ^ Vinke 2008, p. 91–92.
  11. ^ https://sta.uwi.edu/fst/lifesciences/sites/default/files/lifesciences/documents/ogatt/Chelonoidis_denticulata%20-%20Yellow-footed%20Tortoise%20or%20Morocoy.pdf

Vinke, Sabine; Holger Vetter; Thomas Vinke; Susanne Vetter (2008). South American Tortoises (Chelonian Library Vol. 3). Germany: Edition Chimera. ISBN 978-389973-603-8.

Further reading Edit

  • Alderton, David. Turtles and Tortoises of the World. New York: Facts on File Publications,1988. ISBN 9780816017331.
  • Bjorndal, Karen A. (March 1989). "Flexibility of digestive responses in two generalist herbivores, the tortoises Geochelone carbonaria and Geochelone denticulata". Oecologia. 78 (3): 317–321. Bibcode:1989Oecol..78..317B. doi:10.1007/bf00379104. PMID 28312576. S2CID 2667016.
  • Ebenhack, Amanda (2009). Redfoots and Yellowfoots; The Natural History, Captive Care, and Breeding of 'Chelonoidis carbonaria' and 'Chelonoidis denticulata' (Turtles of the World, Testudinidae, Number 3). Living Art Publishing. ISBN 978-0978755638.
  • Hagan, J.W. "What's the Difference: Differentiating Geochelone denticulata and Geochelone carbonaria" Tortuga Gazette 1989. [1]
  • Halliday, Dr. Tim, and Dr. Kraig Adler, eds. The Encyclopedia of Reptiles and Amphibians. New York: Facts on File Publications, 1986. ISBN 0-8160-1359-4.
  • Moskovits, Debra K. (1985). "The Behavior and Ecology of the Two Amazonian Tortoises, Geochelone carbonaria and Geochelone denticulata, in Northwestern Brazil". University of Chicago. PhD Dissertation.
  • Pritchard, Peter C. H.; Pedro Trebbau (1984). The Turtles of South America, Contributions to Herpetology: No. 2. Society for the Study of Amphibians and Reptiles.
  • Strong, Joel N.; Jose M. V. Fragoso (2006). "Seed Dispersal by Geochelone carbonaria and G. denticulata in Northwestern Brazil". Biotropica. 38 (5): 683–686. doi:10.1111/j.1744-7429.2006.00185.x. S2CID 83502696.
  • Vargas-Ramirez, Mario; Jerome Maran; Uwe Fritz (2010). (PDF). Organisms Diversity & Evolution. 10 (2): 161–172. doi:10.1007/s13127-010-0016-0. S2CID 28894541. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-10-04. Retrieved 2012-08-13.
  • Ward, B. Sedgwick County Zoo. 2 May 2001.

External links Edit

  •   Media related to Geochelone denticulata at Wikimedia Commons
  •   Data related to Geochelone denticulata at Wikispecies

yellow, footed, tortoise, yellow, footed, tortoise, chelonoidis, denticulatus, also, known, brazilian, giant, tortoise, species, tortoise, family, testudinidae, closely, related, footed, tortoise, carbonarius, found, amazon, basin, south, america, species, nam. The yellow footed tortoise Chelonoidis denticulatus also known as the Brazilian giant tortoise 2 is a species of tortoise in the family Testudinidae and is closely related to the red footed tortoise C carbonarius It is found in the Amazon Basin of South America The species name has often been misspelled as denticulata an error introduced in the 1980s when Chelonoidis was elevated to genus and mistakenly treated as feminine an error recognized and fixed in 2017 3 Yellow footed tortoiseYellow footed tortoise Yasuni National Park EcuadorConservation statusVulnerable IUCN 3 1 Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass ReptiliaOrder TestudinesSuborder CryptodiraSuperfamily TestudinoideaFamily TestudinidaeGenus ChelonoidisSpecies C denticulatusBinomial nameChelonoidis denticulatus Linnaeus 1766 Synonyms 1 Testudo denticulata Linneasus 1766 Testudo tabulata Walbaum 1782 nomen illegitimum Testudo tessellata Schneider 1792 Testudo tabulata Schoepff 1793 Testudo terrestris americana Schweigger 1812 Testudo terrestris brasiliensis Schweigger 1812 Testudo terrestris var cayennensis Schweigger 1812 Testudo terrestris surinamensis Schweigger 1812 Chersine denticulata Merrem 1820 Chersine tessellata Merrem 1820 Testudo cagado Spix 1824 Testudo hercules Spix 1824 Testudo sculpta Spix 1824 Chersine tabulata Gravenhorst 1829 Testudo planata Gmelin 1831 nomen nudum Testudo foveolata Schinz 1833 nomen nudum Geochelone Chelonoidis tabulata Fitzinger 1835 Geochelone Geochelone denticulata Fitzinger 1835 Chelonoides tabulata Agassiz 1857 Chelonoidis tabulata Agassiz 1857 Chelonoidis denticulata Froes 1957 Chelonoides denticulata Obst 1980 Geochelone denticulta Richard 1999 ex errore With an average length of 40 cm 15 75 in and the largest known specimen at 94 cm 37 in this is the sixth largest tortoise species on Earth after the Galapagos tortoise the Aldabra tortoise the African spurred tortoise Geochelone sulcata typical size 76 cm 30 in the leopard tortoise Stigmochelys pardalis and the Asian forest tortoise Manouria emys emys typical size 60 cm 23 6 in Contents 1 Taxonomy 2 Physical characteristics and appearance 2 1 Sexual dimorphism 3 Natural habitat 4 Behavior 5 Diet 6 Reproduction and growth 7 Conservation status 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksTaxonomy EditThe yellow footed tortoise is also called the yellow foot or yellow legged tortoise the Brazilian giant tortoise or South American forest tortoise as well as local names such as morrocoy what language is this woyamou what language is this or wayamo what language is this or some variation of jabuta what language is this Many of the local names are shared with the similar red footed tortoise 4 Originally Karl Linnaeus assigned all turtles and tortoises to the genus Testudo and described this species as Testudo denticulata in 1766 Soon the term Testudo was only being used for tortoises as opposed to all chelonians with tortoises defined by completely terrestrial behaviors heavy shells and elephant like limbs with nails but no visible toes The species got several other names as well for several reasons such as difficulty in distinguishing it from the red footed confusion over locations researchers thinking they had discovered a new species in collections or in the field etc Leopold Fitzinger created the genus Geochelone for medium to large tortoises that did not come from the Mediterranean area which remained Testudo or have other special characteristics such as the hinged shells of the genus Kinixys Fitzinger further used the term Chelonoidis as a subgenus to categorize Geochelone from South America Neither term was widely used until they were resurrected by researchers such as Williams in 1960 5 Researchers such as Roger Bour and Charles Crumly separated Geochelone into different genera based largely on their skulls They created or re established several genera Aldabrachelys Astrochelys Cylindraspis Indotestudo Manouria and Chelonoidis The debate is on going over the definitions and validity of some of these genera Chelonoidis is primarily defined as being from South America lacking a nuchal scute the marginal scute located over the neck and a large undivided supracaudal the scute or scutes directly over the tail 6 Chelonoidis is made up of two very different looking groups the C carbonarius group with the yellow footed and red footed tortoises and the C chilensis group with the Galapagos tortoises C niger Argentine tortoise C chilensis and Chaco tortoise C petersi The taxonomic and evolutionary relationship of these two groups is poorly understood 7 Physical characteristics and appearance Edit nbsp Yellow footed tortoise at Parque Zoologico do Rio Grande do Sul BrazilYellow footed tortoises are a large species fifth largest overall and third largest mainland species after the Aldabra giant tortoise Aldabrachelys gigantea Galapagos giant tortoise Chelonoidis niger African spurred tortoise and Asian forest tortoise Typical sizes average 40 cm 15 75 in but much larger specimens are common The largest known specimen is a female that was 94 cm 37 in long 8 They closely resemble the red footed tortoise and can sometimes be difficult to tell apart especially as a preserved specimen which led to quite a bit of confusion over the names and ranges The carapace shell top is a long oval with parallel sides and a high domed back that is generally flat along the vertebrals scutes or shell scales along the top of the carapace with a slight peak near the hind end There are five vertebral scutes four pairs of costals eleven pairs of marginals no nuchal scute the marginal over the neck and a large undivided supracaudal the marginals over the tail The front and rear marginals scutes along the edge of the carapace are slightly serrated in front and rear of young yellow footed tortoises The carapace is yellowish brown to dark brown or even black at the edges of the scutes The areola in each scute are pale yellow orange or light brown and blend into the darker carapace The plastron shell bottom is thick around the edges and the gulars front pair of plastron scutes do not project past the carapace The plastron is yellow brown turning nearly black near the seams The head is relatively small and longer than wide The upper jaw has three tooth like points There are large black eyes with a tympanum behind each eye The skin of the head and limbs is black with yellow to orange scales on top and around the eye and ear The forelimbs have five claws are long and slightly flattened They are covered with fine dark scales and slightly overlapping larger scales on front in the same color as the head The hind limbs are elephant like with four claws and are covered in small scales colored like the forelimbs The tail varies in length by gender and has a row of colored scales on the sides 9 Sexual dimorphism Edit Adult males average slightly larger than females but the largest specimens tend to be females Males develop a distinctive incurving of sides giving them a well defined waist and a deeply in curved plastron The female has a short conical tail while the male has a longer more muscular tail that is generally carried tucked along one side The anal notch of the male is also larger presumably to allow better tail mobility 10 Natural habitat EditThere is some disagreement as to which habitat is the preferred type for yellow footed tortoises Some feel they prefer grasslands and dry forest areas and that rain forest habitat is most likely marginal Others suggest humid forest is the preferred habitat Regardless they are found in drier forest areas grasslands and the savanna or rainforest belts adjoining more open habitats The red footed tortoise shares some of its range with the yellow footed tortoise In ranges shared in Surinam the red footed tortoise has moved out of the forests into grasslands created a result of slash and burn agriculture while the yellow footed tortoise has remained in the forest Behavior EditThese tortoises make a sound like a baby cooing with a raspy voice Tortoises also identify each other using body language The male tortoise makes head movements toward other males but the female does not make these head movements Male tortoises also swing their heads back and forth in a continuous rhythm as a mating ritual Mating occurs all year round for the yellow footed tortoise There is no parental care of the young and the baby tortoises will fend for themselves starting by eating calcium rich plant matter Diet Edit nbsp At Yasuni National Park EcuadorThe yellow footed tortoise eats many kinds of foliage They are too slow to capture any fast animals In the wild their diets consist of grasses flowers fallen fruit carrion plants bones mushrooms excrement and slow moving invertebrates such as snails worms and others they are able to capture 11 In captivity they are fed oranges apples melons endive collard greens dandelions plantain ribwort clover shredded carrots insects worms cuttlebone tortoise vitamins edible flowers and alfalfa pellets Each yellow footed tortoise in the wild reaches the age of maturity at about 8 10 years The fecundity of a female generally depends on her size the bigger they are the more eggs they can produce On average a female will create about six to 16 eggs per year although some female individuals may not reproduce each year The eggs have brittle shells and are elongated to spherical about 3 6 cm in diameter The egg size will increase with the body size of the tortoise The young are self sufficient from birth The yellow footed tortoise can live around 50 60 years Reproduction and growth EditBreeding is synchronized with the onset of the rainy season from July to September where a general increase in activity is noted Males identify each other by eliciting a characteristic head movement a series of jerks away from and back to mid position Another male will make the same head movements No head movement in response is the first indication that the other tortoise is a female Scientific experimentation and observation has also indicated head coloration has to be correct He will then sniff the cloacal region of the other tortoise Copulation usually follows though sometimes there is a period of biting at the legs During courtship and copulation the male makes clucking sounds very much like those of a chicken with a set pattern in pitches of the clucking sounds Rival males will battle attempting to overturn each other but neither the males nor females will defend a territory They are considered nomadic in their movements In almost every tortoise species where male combat occurs the males are always larger than the females This is in comparison to aquatic species where the males are usually smaller than the females and do not engage in male to male combat Species with male combat are thought to have evolved larger males because they have a better chance of winning a bout and mating with a female thus passing on their larger size to their offspring Species with smaller males evolved because smaller males are more mobile and can mate with a large number of females thus passing on their genes Conservation status EditChelonoidis denticulatus is an endangered species The major populations located in South America are protected under the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species Appendix II As with many species of turtles and tortoises many yellow footed tortoises end up as food items in local markets This species of tortoise is popular in the pet trade References Edit Fritz Uwe Peter Havas 2007 Checklist of Chelonians of the World PDF Vertebrate Zoology 57 2 269 270 ISSN 1864 5755 Archived PDF from the original on 1 May 2011 Retrieved 29 May 2012 The Brazilian Giant Tortoise by M A Cohen PDF Turtle Taxonomy Working Group 2017 Turtles of the world Annotated checklist and atlas of taxonomy synonymy distribution and conservation status 8th Ed PDF New York Chelonian Research Foundation ISBN 978 1 5323 5560 8 OCLC 1124067380 Vinke 2008 p 31 33 Vinke 2008 p 16 18 Crumly Charles 1982 A cladistic analysis of Geochelone using cranial osteology Journal of Herpetology 16 3 215 234 doi 10 2307 1563715 JSTOR 1563715 Vinke 2008 p 19 Vinke 2008 p 99 90 Vinke 2008 p 85 87 Vinke 2008 p 91 92 https sta uwi edu fst lifesciences sites default files lifesciences documents ogatt Chelonoidis denticulata 20 20Yellow footed 20Tortoise 20or 20Morocoy pdf Vinke Sabine Holger Vetter Thomas Vinke Susanne Vetter 2008 South American Tortoises Chelonian Library Vol 3 Germany Edition Chimera ISBN 978 389973 603 8 Further reading EditAlderton David Turtles and Tortoises of the World New York Facts on File Publications 1988 ISBN 9780816017331 Bjorndal Karen A March 1989 Flexibility of digestive responses in two generalist herbivores the tortoises Geochelone carbonaria and Geochelone denticulata Oecologia 78 3 317 321 Bibcode 1989Oecol 78 317B doi 10 1007 bf00379104 PMID 28312576 S2CID 2667016 Ebenhack Amanda 2009 Redfoots and Yellowfoots The Natural History Captive Care and Breeding of Chelonoidis carbonaria and Chelonoidis denticulata Turtles of the World Testudinidae Number 3 Living Art Publishing ISBN 978 0978755638 Hagan J W What s the Difference Differentiating Geochelone denticulata and Geochelone carbonaria Tortuga Gazette 1989 1 Halliday Dr Tim and Dr Kraig Adler eds The Encyclopedia of Reptiles and Amphibians New York Facts on File Publications 1986 ISBN 0 8160 1359 4 Moskovits Debra K 1985 The Behavior and Ecology of the Two Amazonian Tortoises Geochelone carbonaria and Geochelone denticulata in Northwestern Brazil University of Chicago PhD Dissertation Pritchard Peter C H Pedro Trebbau 1984 The Turtles of South America Contributions to Herpetology No 2 Society for the Study of Amphibians and Reptiles Strong Joel N Jose M V Fragoso 2006 Seed Dispersal by Geochelone carbonaria and G denticulata in Northwestern Brazil Biotropica 38 5 683 686 doi 10 1111 j 1744 7429 2006 00185 x S2CID 83502696 Vargas Ramirez Mario Jerome Maran Uwe Fritz 2010 Red and yellow footed tortoises Chelonoidis carbonaria and C denticulata Reptilia Testudines Testudinidae in South American savannahs and forests do their phylogeographies reflect distinct habitats PDF Organisms Diversity amp Evolution 10 2 161 172 doi 10 1007 s13127 010 0016 0 S2CID 28894541 Archived from the original PDF on 2013 10 04 Retrieved 2012 08 13 Ward B Sedgwick County Zoo 2 May 2001 2 External links Edit nbsp Media related to Geochelone denticulata at Wikimedia Commons nbsp Data related to Geochelone denticulata at Wikispecies Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Yellow footed tortoise amp oldid 1169231661, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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