Trachemys scripta elegans / Red-Eared Slider at the Dallas Arboretum and Botanical Garden in Dallas, TX
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Trachemys scripta elegans / Red-Eared Slider at the Dallas Arboretum and Botanical Garden in Dallas, TX
A pair of red-eared sliders (Trachemys scripta elegans) in Singapore
As with other populations of pond sliders in non-US countries these have become invasive after releases from the pet trade.
by Gary Stephenson
📍 Location: Durham, North Carolina 🗓 Date: May 8, 2026 🐾 Media: Image 🌿 Species: Pond Slider (Trachemys scripta) 📝 Notes: Medium-sized freshwater turtle commonly found in ponds, lakes, slow-moving rivers, canals, and marshes across the southeastern United States, with introduced populations in many other regions. Often seen basking on logs, rocks, or shoreline banks.
Carapace is typically dark green to brown with yellow striping; individuals often show red or yellow markings behind the eye depending on subspecies (notably the red-eared slider). Highly adaptable and frequently observed in human-altered water bodies.
Observed to be young juvenile, likely several days old at most. Hybrid between subspecies red-eared slider and yellow-bellied slider.
🔗 iNaturalist: https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/359570640
Pond Sliders (Trachemys scripta), taken March 1, 2026, in Georgia, US
A small army of turtles taking advantage of the sun to soak up some UV rays! This is just a portion of the many, many turtles I saw out on Sunday. I had no idea they were out already, though with all the warm weather, I don't know why I was so surprised! As the sun grows stronger, basking becomes a better and better pastime for these turtles, allowing them to recover their UV deficit from the months of little to no exposure due to the weak sunlight. These turtles were out all day, moving only to dip into the water away from a person straying too close for comfort. What a peaceful life!
Scientific Name: Trachemys scripta ssp. elegans Common Name(s): Red-eared slider Family: Emydidae (pond & box turtle) Life Stage(s): Adult Location: Plano, Texas Season(s): Spring
Today is World Turtle Day, apparently.
(x, x, x)
Have you seen a Red-Eared Slider/Red-Eared Terrapin (Trachemys scripta elegans)?
I have seen one in nature
I have seen one in captivity
I have seen a dead one/a taxidermy
I don't know if I've seen one in person
I've only seen photos, never seen in person
I've never heard of this animal
Turtles! (Probabily Trachemys scripta)
How to support me: Ko-Fi page
Do you know any cool fact about turtles you want to share with the class? /genuine
WHEN I SAY THIS I MEAN IT BUT LITERALLY RUNNING IN CIRCLES RN YES FINALLY!!!!!!!!
Ejem.
I'll start with the basics then expanding but also winging it because yes. Under read more because I infodumped hard here
So sliders. Sliders (trachemys) is a genus that lives all of america, and which it's main and most known subspecies, red eared sliders (RES, or scripta elegants) is best know by two things: the fact that it's the most popular type of pet turtle globaly, and that they are STUPIDLY resilient. These two facts, naturally, create the perfect storm for an extremely invasive species due to neglectful or ignorant owners who get tired of the eety beety lil bean once it starts to show it grows to a max size of 12 inches/30cms and lives to even 30 years old.