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Kinosternon cora LOC-BARRAGÁN, REYES-VELASCO, WOOLRICH-PIÑA, GRÜNWALD, VENEGAS DE ANAYA, RANGEL-MENDOZA & LÓPEZ-LUNA, 2020

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Higher TaxaKinosternidae (Kinosterninae), Kinosternoidea, Testudines (turtles)
Subspecies 
Common NamesE: Cora Mud Turtle
S: Casquito cora, Chacuanita cora 
SynonymKinosternon cora LOC-BARRAGÁN, REYES-VELASCO, WOOLRICH-PIÑA, GRÜNWALD, VENEGAS DE ANAYA, RANGEL-MENDOZA & LÓPEZ-LUNA 2020
Kinosternon cora — TTWG 2021 
DistributionMexico (Sinaloa, Nayarit)

Type locality: Mexico: Sinaloa: Ejido La Concepción (La Concha), Municipio de Escuinapa (22.531758°, -105.450767°; datum WGS 84; elev. 10 masl  
Reproduction 
TypesHolotype: MZFC-HE 35627 (JALB-391, pers. collection of JA Loc-Barragán), an adult female, collected on 4 September 2017 by J. A. Loc-Barragan. (Fig. 1,4 in Loc-Barragán et al. 2020).
Paratypes (3): An adult female (JALB-412, MZFC-HE 35628) (Fig. 2A) and juvenile male (JALB-411, MZFC-HE 35629) (Fig. 3) from Mexico: Sinaloa: Ejido La Concepción (La Concha), Municipio de Escuinapa (22.531758°N, -105.450767°W; datum WGS 84; elev. 10 masl) (Fig. 4) collected on 15 October 2017 by J. Loc-Barragan, M. A. López-Luna and A. H. Escobedo-Galván; an adult female (UTEP 3908) (Fig. 2B) from Mexico: Nayarit: 11 km S of Acaponeta on Hwy. 15 (Fig. 4) collected on 23 August 1962 by R. G. Webb, D. W. Tinkle, W. Auffenberg, W. Auffenberg Jr., L. Irwin, W. Milstead and D. Patten. 
DiagnosisDiagnosis: A small Kinosternon, the largest known specimen is a female (CL=107.7 mm). This species is unique among Kinosternon of western Mexico, except K. vogti, of which it is a sister species, by possessing a very reduced and weakly kinetic plastron; a narrow bridge; and a proportionally wide carapace. We describe the diagnostic characteristics of Kinosternon cora with the species present on the Mexican Pacific versant (Table 2 in Loc-Barragán et al. 2020).
Kinosternon cora differs from K. chimalhuaca, Berry, Seidel and Iverson 1997, with which it was originally confused, by the following characters (character states of K. chimalhuaca in parentheses): A greater relative carapace width, average CW/CL ratio > 71% (< 70%); a very small plastron; average PHW/CW < 49% (> 49%); a narrow bridge, average BRL/CL < 13% (>13%); and a relatively large axillary scute, > 60% of the size of the inguinal scute (< 60% of the size of the inguinal scute).
Kinosternon cora differs from the broadly sympatric K. integrum LeConte 1854, by the following characters (character states of K. integrum in parentheses): A greater relative carapace width, average CW/CL ratio > 71% (< 70%); a very small plastron, average PHW/CW < 49% (> 55%); a long interfemoral scute seam, average FEL/HL > 40% (< 40%); a narrow bridge, average BRL/CL < 13% (>18%); and a relatively large axillary scute > 60% of the size of the inguinal scute (< 35% of the size of the inguinal scute).
Kinosternon cora differs from the southern species, Kinosternon oaxacae Berry and Iverson 1980, by the following characters (character states of K. oaxacae in parentheses): A greater relative carapace width, average CW/CL ratio > 71% (< 70%); a very small plastron, average PHW/CW < 49% (> 53%); a long interfemoral scute seam, average FEL/HL > 40% (< 40%); a narrow bridge, average BRL/CL < 13% (>18%); a relatively large axillary scute, > 60% of the size of the inguinal scute (< 40% of the size of the inguinal scute); and the first vertebral scute not in contact with M2 (first vertebral scute in contact with M2).
Kinosternon cora differs from the southernmost Mexican coastal species, Kinosternon scorpioides cruentatum (Duméril and Bibron 1851), by the following characters (character states of K. s. cruentatum in parentheses): A greater relative carapace width, average CW/CL ratio > 71% (< 70%); a very small plastron, average PHW/CW < 49% (> 60%); a long interfemoral scute seam, average FEL/HL > 40% (< 20%); a narrow bridge, average BRL/CL < 13% (>25%); a relatively large axillary scute, > 60% of the size of the inguinal scute (< 40% of the size of the inguinal scute.
Kinosternon cora differs from the northern Pacific coastal species, Kinosternon alamosae Berry and Legler 1980, by the following characters (character states of K. alamosae in parentheses): A greater relative carapace width, average CW/CL ratio > 71% (< 70%); a very small plastron, average PHW/CW < 49% (> 70%); a long interfemoral scute seam, average FEL/HL > 40% (< 35%); a narrow bridge, average BRL/CL < 13% (>30%); and axillary and inguinal scutes in broad contact, separating the abdominal and marginal scutes (Axillary and inguinal scutes never in contact, abdominal and marginals in contact).
Kinosternon cora differs from the northernmost Mexican coastal species Kinosternon stejnegeri Hartweg 1938 (formerly K. arizonense Gilmore 1923), by the following characters (character states of K. stejnegeri): A very small plastron, average PHW/CW < 49% (> 70%); a long interfemoral scute seam, average FEL/HL > 40% (< 35%); a narrow bridge, average BRL/CL < 13% (>25%); a relatively broad axillary scute, less than twice as long as wide (narrow axillary scute, three times longer than wide)
Kinosternon cora is a member of the K. hirtipes/integrum group. The subspecies of K. hirtipes (Wagler 1830), closest geographically to Kinosternon cora is K. h. chapalaense Iverson 1981. Kinosternon cora differs from K. h. chapalaense, by the following characters (character states of K. h. chapalaense in parentheses): A greater relative plastron width, average AHW/CL ratio > 40% (< 35%); a very small plastron, average PHW/CW < 49% (> 50%); a long interfemoral scute seam, average FEL/HL > 40% (< 35%); and a narrow bridge, average BRL/CL < 13% (>18%).
Kinosternon cora is the sister species of geographically proximate K. vogti (Fig. 4) with which it shares several characters that distinguish them both from the other species. However, Kinosternon cora differs from K. vogti by the following characters (character states of K. vogti in parentheses): a more robust body (body small); darker gray skin coloration (skin coloration pale grayish); a nuchal scale that is two to three times width than long (nuchal scale as wide as long; Figs. 5 A, B); marginal scale 11 half as high as marginal 10 (marginal 11 almost as high, or just a little shorter than marginal 10; Figs. 5 C, D); posterior plastral lobe not notched posteriorly (posterior plastral lobe notched; Figs. 5 E, F); plastron length smaller, average PL/CL ratio 80% (average PL/CL ratio 90%); bridge length shorter, average BRL/CL ratio 11% (average BRL/CL ratio 19%); rostral shield less conspicuous, Vshaped (rostral shield large and rounded); rostral shield the same color as the dorsal head coloration (rostral shield different color than coloration than head, bright yellow in males, pale yellowish in females Figs. 5 G, H); and males without yellow reticulations on head (males with small yellow reticulations on head) (Loc-Barragán et al. 2020).


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CommentDistribution: see map in Loc-Barragán et al. 2020: 516 (Fig. 4). 
EtymologyThe specific epithet is derived from the name “Cora”, the Native-Mexican ethnic group that is most widespread in Nayarit. The ethnic Cora population is concentrated in the municipalities of El Nayar, Acaponeta, Rosamorada and Ruiz, all of which are in Nayarit, the state where this new species was first discovered in 1962. 
References
  • Loc-Barragán JA, Smith GR, Woolrich-Piña GA, Lemos-Espinal JA 2024. An updated checklist of the amphibians and reptiles of Nayarit, Mexico with conservation status and comparison with adjoining States. Herpetozoa 37: 25-42 - get paper here
  • LOC-BARRAGÁN, JESÚS A.; JACOBO REYES-VELASCO, GUILLERMO A. WOOLRICH-PIÑA, CHRISTOPH I. GRÜNWALD, MYRIAM VENEGAS DE ANAYA, JUDITH A. RANGEL-MENDOZA, MARCO A. LÓPEZ-LUNA 2020. A New Species of Mud Turtle of Genus Kinosternon (Testudines: Kinosternidae) from the Pacific Coastal Plain of Northwestern Mexico. Zootaxa 4885 (4): 509–529 - get paper here
  • TTWG; Rhodin, A.G.J., Iverson, J.B., Bour, R., Fritz, U., Georges, A., Shaffer, H.B., and van Dijk, P.P. 2021. Turtles of the World: Annotated Checklist and Atlas of Taxonomy, Synonymy, Distribution, and Conservation Status (9th Ed.). In: Rhodin, A.G.J., Iverson, J.B., van Dijk, P.P., Stanford, C.B., Goode, E.V., Buhlmann, K.A., and Mittermeier, R.A. (Eds.). Chelonian Research Monographs 8:1–472. doi:10.3854/crm.8.checklist.atlas.v9.2021. - get paper here
 
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