Pond slider

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Pond slider
Trachemys scripta elegans, the red-eared slider

Least Concern  (IUCN 3.1)[1][2]
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Reptilia
Order: Testudines
Suborder: Cryptodira
Superfamily: Testudinoidea
Family: Emydidae
Genus: Trachemys
Species:
T. scripta
Binomial name
Trachemys scripta
(
Schoepff, 1792)[3][2][4]
Subspecies range map in the United States.
  red-eared slider (also in Mexico)

The pond slider (Trachemys scripta) is a species of common, medium-sized, semiaquatic

plastron
), and green and yellow stripes and markings on their skin. These patterns and colors in the skin and shell fade with age until the carapace is a muted olive green to brown and the plastron is a dull yellow or darker. Some sliders become almost black with few visible markings. The carapace is oval with a bit of rounding and a central crest with knobs, but these features soften and fade with age, adults being smoother and flatter. For determining an adult slider's sex, males typically have much longer front claws than adult females, while females usually have shorter, more slender tails than males. Their lifespans range from 20 to 50 years.

Etymology

The origin of the name slider stems from the behavior of these turtles when startled. Groups of sliders, sometimes quite large, as well as many other types of less abundant freshwater turtles, are often seen basking and sunning on logs, branches, and vegetation at or even well above the water's surface, but they readily and quickly scramble if they sense danger, shooting back in and darting away to safety underwater.

Distribution

Pond sliders are native to the south-central and southeastern United States and northern Mexico.

Subspecies

Image Subspecies Distribution
T. s. scriptayellow-bellied slider[2] from Florida to southeastern Virginia
T. s. elegansred-eared slider[2] Midwestern United States to northern Mexico
T. s. troostiiCumberland slider[2] Southeastern United States.

Invasive species

An adult and young T. s. elegans with a young T. s. scripta in New York, USA, where they are invasive species

In the 1900s, many pond sliders were captured for sale. In the 1950s, millions of turtles were being farmed and shipped abroad as part of the pet trade.

These turtles often compete with native species for food, habitat, and other resources. Eventually, they bully many native species out of basking sites, where sunlight (and warmth) is available for the species. When basking, pond sliders commonly bask on birds' nests, thereby killing the eggs. They also prey on young birds.

Turtles that were raised in captivity can develop diseases that are unfamiliar to native species, which can be harmful. Turtles raised in captivity are often released because they become too much to handle or grow bigger than expected. Not uncommonly, they also escape.

Conservationists have warned owners not to release these turtles into the wild. Many states also have passed legislation to control the possession and release of pond sliders. Two states have banned their sale entirely.

In Europe, T. scripta is included since 2016 in the list of Invasive Alien Species of Union concern (the Union list).[5] This implies that this species cannot be imported, bred, transported, commercialized, or intentionally released into the environment in the whole of the European Union.[6] By the first quarter of the 21st century, this species has spread widely across the waters of Europe and Southeast Asia, and is also found in the Urals and Siberia.[7]

Hybridization between yellow-bellied and red-eared sliders is not uncommon where the ranges of the two subspecies overlap.[8]

References

Further reading

External links