Florida Softshell Turtle (Apalone ferox)
Observed by neexie, CC BY-NC

seen from Greece
seen from Australia
seen from Malaysia

seen from Russia
seen from China
seen from Türkiye
seen from China
seen from United States
seen from Germany
seen from Brazil

seen from Australia
seen from China

seen from United States
seen from Japan

seen from Russia
seen from United States
seen from Russia
seen from T1
seen from China
seen from United States
Florida Softshell Turtle (Apalone ferox)
Observed by neexie, CC BY-NC
Clap for the Indian Flapshell Turtle!
The Indian flapshell turtle, also known as Lissemys punctata is a species of softshell turtle found throughout India, as well as Pakistan, Bangladesh, Nepal, Sri Lanka, and Myanmar. It prefers quiet, stagnant freshwater and muddy bottoms, and is most common in slow moving river and streams, marshes, ponds, lakes, and reservoirs. However, this species is also able to tolerate salt water to some degree, and therefore may also be occasionally found in salt marshes and estuaries.
L. punctata gets its common name from the leathery flaps of skin attached to its underbelly, which covers the limbs when they are drawn in and helps individuals retain moisture during the dry season. Female Indian flapshells are larger than males, with a maximum shell length of 35 cm (13 in) and a weight of up to 800 g (28.2 oz), while males reach a maximum of only 23 cm (9 in) and 550 g (19.4 oz). There are three subspecies of the Indian flapshell turtle which may be distinguished by the pattern on their shells. The nominal species, L. p. punctata and L. p. vittata both have smooth, dark brown or olive green shells, while L. p. andersoni has bright yellow spots along the head and back. The underbellies of all subspecies are typically white or pale yellow.
During the wet season, Indian flapshell turtles spend most of their time foraging for food. Their drab colouring allows them to hide easily along muddy bottoms or dense vegetation. L. punctata are opportunistic omnivores, meaning they will eat just about anything that they can find. They are known to feed on a variety of items, including aquatic vegetation, fish, shrimp, snails, crustaceans, mollusks, small mammals and amphibians, and carrion. Adults are predated upon by crocodiles; in the dry season, they may also be opportunistically predated upon by vultures, crows, and wild pigs, as this is when adults are more likely to either burrow into the mud to wait for rain, or move overland in search of water.
Nesting for L. punctata typically occurs at the start of the wet season and continues from June to November. Adult males seek out females and court them by stroking her shell with his flippers. If she is receptive, the pair mirror each other and bob heads before copulation. Afterwards, the female digs a nest close to the edge of the water and lays anywhere from 2-16 eggs. She may lay up to three clutches over the course of the wet season. Incubation typically takes 200-300 days, although some clutches may take up to 400 days to hatch.
Indian flapshell eggs are highly resistant to flooding, and may survive up to 24 hours of submersion. After hatching, the young are completely independent; survival is therefore quite low. Those that make it to adulthood begin reproducing at 2-3 years old, and may live to be up to 20 years.
Conservation status: The IUCN currently lists the Indian flapshell turtle as Least Concern, although recent studies have recommended the species be upgraded to Vulnerable. They are primarily threatened by hunting for meat and medicinal value, as well as poaching for the pet trade. Secondary threats include habitat loss or degredation and road moralities.
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Photos
Harikrishnan S
avrajjal via iNaturalist
makarandsaraf via iNaturalist
L. Shyamal
🐢 Teeny Tiny Turtle Tuesday! 🐢
Hatchling Chinese softshell turtles (Pelodiscus sinensis) illustrated for Naturgeschichte der Schildköten (1792) by Johann David Schöpfs.
View more reptile posts and illustrations.
A Child's Book of Snakes, Lizards, & Other Reptiles. Written by Kathleen N. Daly, illustrated by Lilian Obligado. 1980.
Internet Archive
Malayan Softshell Turtle (Dogania subplana) 🐢
Here’s another preview of one the pages i worked on for the “Top 10 Weirdest Critters of Singapore’s Rainforest” book, published by Cicada Tree Eco-Place.
Softshell Turtle stretch
(source)
Did the writers ever say which kind of softshell turtle Donnie is? I know he's either a smooth, spiny, or Florida softshell, because other types look way different from his pre-mutated baby self.
Like it's obvious which kind of species Raph and Leo are, and they've said Mikey's an ornate box turtle. Whenever they mention what Donnie is it's just "softshell", which is a family, not a species.
My herpetology hyperfixation NEEDS to know. Genuinely hope he's a spiny tho, I like to think when he grows up he'll grow little spikes around the upper rim of his shell :)
What kind of creatures reside in the murky, mucky storm water retention pond at my work?
One of the world's smallest! The Least Killifish is the smallest live-bearing fish in the world! They live alongside a zillion Eastern Mosquitofish and possibly some other species I haven't caught yet to identify.
A bunch of softies! I see softshell turtles a lot, butI haven't looked up what species they are yet.
Giant, hella invasive fish! (Plecostomas added a while ago to control algae. They do not) Thankfully, the pond does not directly output to any other bodies of water, even if it floods, and it has a fish fry control grate on the overflow outlet for the grass carp that were recently added.
Gators!! Mainly small ones, safely growing bigger away from the adults. I see them basking or floating almost every day. I stumbled on this guy napping while I took a walk.
I recently got up enough courage to offer to help take care of the pond, which has an immensely thick layer of muck on the bottom and so little oxygen that the fish hang out in a few shallow channels most of the time.
To my surprise, management happily agreed and is giving me everything I requested to take care of it, including a nice aerator and hundreds of dollars of beneficial bacteria tablets. Even my suggestions to change the landscaping routine and plant native pond plants were enthusiastically accepted.
After being fired from a well paying job because I dared to ask for (completely free, barely visible) disability accommodations, this event is mind blowing to me.