Sternotherus depressus TINKLE & WEBB, 1955
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Higher Taxa | Kinosternidae (Kinosterninae), Kinosternoidea, Testudines (turtles) |
Subspecies | |
Common Names | E: Flattened Musk Turtle |
Synonym | Sternotherus depressus TINKLE & WEBB 1955 Sternotherus minor depressus — WERMUTH & MERTENS 1961 Sternotherus minor depressus — ERNST & BARBOUR 1972 Kinosternon depressum — ERNST & BARBOUR 1989: 74 Sternotherus depressus — CONANT & COLLINS 1991: 46 Sternotherus depressus — CROTHER 2000 Kinosternon depressum — BONIN et al 2006 Sternotherus depressus — SCOTT et al. 2017 Sternotherus depressus — TTWG 2021 |
Distribution | USA (N Alabama) Type locality: "Mulberry Fork of the Black Warrior River, 9 miles east of Jasper, Walker County, Alabama, near the bridge crossing of U.S. Highway 78". |
Reproduction | oviparous. |
Types | Holotype: LSUM 109567 (was: TU 16171 at Tulane University) |
Diagnosis | Diagnosis: Morphologically, S. depressus can be diagnosed from all other species of Sternotherus by this combination of characteristics: a round low carapace with flared margins that may possess a single low keel in young animals (but lateral keels are lacking), reticulate pattern of lines on the head and neck, and a single pair of neck barbels. There is evidence of introgression between S. depressus and S. peltifer in this, and other work (e.g. Scott and Rissler 2015). and hybrids between these two species may be found in the North River drainage of the Black Warrior River (Scott et al. 2017). Additional details (1439 characters) are available for collaborators and contributors. Please contact us for details. |
Comment | Habitat: freshwater (swamps, quiet rivers) Hybridization: Sternotherus depressus and S. minor hybridize (Scott et al. 2017). In fact, S. depressus is nested within S. minor Distribution: see map in Scott et al. 2017: Fig. 2. Hybridization: Specimens intermediate between K. minor and K. depressus exist, but are probably interspecific hybrids rather than intergrades. Morphological studies and studies of the electrophoretic properties of proteins of these two turtles have shown them to be closely related but distinct species (Iverson, 1977b; Seidel and Lucchino, 1981; Seidel, Reynolds, and Lucchino, 1981, Ernst & Barbour 1989). |
Etymology | Named after Latin depressus = pressed down or low, for the dorsoventrally flattened carapace. |
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