North American Recent Soft-shelled Turtles (Family Trionychidae) Part 14

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_Paratypes._--Forty-two specimens: ANSP 16717 (hatchling), no data; USNM 78515-16 (hatchlings), Colleto Creek, Victoria County, Texas; TU 10143-45, 10148, 10150-59, 10161-65 (adult males), TU 10176, 10833 (immature males), TU 10147, 10149, 10155 (immature females), TU 10160 (adult female), Guadalupe River, 9 miles southeast Kerrville, Kerr County, Texas; UMMZ 89915-21, 89924-27 (adult males), UMMZ 89922-23 (immature females), same locality as holotype; UMMZ 92752 (immature female), San Antonio River, 3 miles west-northwest Goliad, Victoria County, Texas.

_Description of holotype._--Carapace nearly circular, widest at level of posterior border of hypoplastra; margin entire; dorsal surface "sandpapery" to touch; pale rim separated from ground color of carapace by well-defined, blackish line that is wavy and narrowly interrupted posteriorly and anteriorly; pale rim approximately 1.8 times wider posteriorly (5.4 mm.) than laterally (3.0 mm.); pale rim increasingly narrower anteriorly, absent in nuchal region; tubercles in nuchal region low, scarcely elevated, lacking sharp tips; ground color of carapace olive having pattern of whitish spots and small tubercles; most whitish tubercles inconspicuous pinpoints; other small tubercles in center of whitish spots, mostly approximately 2 millimeters in diameter; largest white spot 3.4 millimeters in diameter; most white spots surrounded by blackish ocelli or parts thereof; whitish spots distributed over entire surface of carapace; certain features of bony carapace evident through overlying skin; carapace highest in region of second and third neurals, forming obtuse, gently sloping, vertebral, keel; undersurface of carapace b.u.t.terscotch yellow, lacking markings; maximum length, 16.5 centimeters; greatest width, 13.5 centimeters.

Plastral surface b.u.t.terscotch yellow, lacking markings, extending slightly farther forward than carapace; anterior and posterior lobes rounded; anterior lobe slightly truncate; certain features of bony elements of plastron visible through overlying skin; maximum length of plastron, 12.0 centimeters.

Head, extended to posterior level of eyes, terminating in flexible snout; septal ridges projecting into each rounded nostril; jaws closed, each covered by fleshy lips except anteriorly where h.o.r.n.y portions exposed; dark triangular mark in front of eyes, base line connecting anterior margins of orbits forming series of dots; pale stripes extending forward from eyes having faint inner, blackish borders; eyelids partly open having blackish dots; pale subocular blotch on right side of head having border of black dots.

Forefeet and hind feet well-webbed having five digits each; each limb having nails on first three digits; each forelimb with four antebrachial scales, three of these having free edge; each hind limb with two h.o.r.n.y scales, one smooth on posterodorsal surface and other with free edge on posteroventral surface; pattern toward insertion of forelimbs indistinct.

Tail terminating in flexible point; p.e.n.i.s exposed; cloacal opening extending beyond posterior edge of carapace; tail olive above bordered by blackish marks; few black dots laterally on left side.

Undersurface of soft parts of body buff, lacking markings; few dark marks posteriorly on webbing of limbs, encroaching on soles and palms.

_Range._--Southcentral Texas in the drainage systems of the Nueces and Guadalupe-San Antonio rivers; the Colorado River drainage in Texas is inhabited by a population that more closely resembles _guadalupensis_ than _pallidus_. See comments under subsection ent.i.tled "Remarks" and Fig. 19.

_Diagnosis._--Juvenal pattern of white dots that are conspicuous on anterior half of carapace, and usually as large as those on posterior half; white dots, sometimes 3 millimeters in diameter, encircled with blackish ocelli in adult males.

_Description._--Plastral length of smallest hatchling, 3.3 centimeters (ANSP 16717); of largest male, 13.5 centimeters (TU 10162); of largest female, 22.0 centimeters (TU 10160).

Hatchlings having white dots on anterior half of carapace; white dots anteriorly nearly as large as those posteriorly, encircled with blackish ocelli, and conspicuous on dark background (ANSP 16717, Pl.

41; USNM 78515-16; Stebbins, 1954:181, Pl. 26B), or smaller than those posteriorly, not encircled with dusky ocelli, and inconspicuous on pale background (TNHC 1446); pale rim of carapace less than four times as wide posteriorly as laterally.

Adult males resembling holotype; size of white tubercles on carapace variable; most, if not all, tubercles surrounded by narrow blackish ocelli, or parts thereof; largest white tubercles or dots in most specimens exceeding one millimeter and in some specimens three millimeters in diameter (TU 10163); white dots often slightly elongate (UMMZ 89917, 89920, 89926; TU 10152, 10145); juvenal pattern of white dots seemingly more contrasting in _guadalupensis_, owing to dark ground color of carapace, than in _pallidus_ or _emoryi_ that have pale brown or tan carapaces; small tubercles along anterior edge of carapace rounded, obtuse, wartlike, never conical; sharp tips often lacking (TU 10153).

Large females often having whitish spots on anterior half of carapace (TU 10160, Pl. 42, upper, right; 10142); carapace dark having ill-defined mottled and blotched pattern; tubercles along anterior edge of carapace low, rounded, rarely equilateral, never conical; small blackish dots rarely on surface of carapace (UMMZ 89923).

Pattern on side of head and snout of little diagnostic value; postocular stripe usually interrupted, but configuration variable, consisting of pale anterior, dark-bordered segment (just behind eye); posterior segment of postocular stripe usually less well-defined and generally blending with adjacent ground color; pale postocular stripe sometimes uninterrupted and dark-bordered throughout its length (TU 10157, 10159, 10176); pattern on dorsal surface of snout variable; pattern usually consisting of uninterrupted dark line (slightly curved anteriorly) connecting anterior margins of orbits (TU 10161, 10164, 10159, 10143), or dark line interrupted (TU 10153, 10154, 10176), absent (TU 10163), or present in addition to dark inner borders of pale stripes that extend anteriorly from eyes (TU 10149, 10162); small, often fine, dark markings, on dorsal surface of limbs, especially forelimbs; ventral surface of plastron and soft parts of body usually whitish, lacking markings; small blackish spots occasionally in region of bridge (TU 10149); dark marks occurring on webbing of limbs and often encroaching on soles and palms.

Ontogenetic variation in PL/HW, mean PL/HW of specimens having plastral lengths 7.0 centimeters or less, 3.83, and exceeding 7.0 centimeters, 5.18; ontogenetic variation in CL/CW, mean CL/CW of specimens having plastron lengths 8.5 centimeters or less, 1.14, and exceeding 8.5 centimeters, 1.22; mean CL/PCW, 2.11; mean HW/SL, 1.38 (including subspecies _pallidus_); mean CL/PL, 1.37.

_Variation._--Two hatchlings (ANSP 13447, Bexar County; TNHC 1446, McMullen County) more closely resemble _pallidus_ than _guadalupensis_.

Some individuals from the Colorado River drainage have features suggesting those that are characteristic of _pallidus_. Large females have obtuse, k.n.o.blike somewhat triangular-shaped tubercles along the anterior edge of the carapace, which are never conelike (TU 14439-40, 10187, 16036.1; BCB 6010). The tubercles along the anterior edge of the carapace are more elevated than in turtles from drainage systems west of the Colorado. Whitish spots are usually absent anteriorly on the carapace, but may be evident through the mottled pattern of large females (BCB 6010, plastral length, 19.7 cm.). The pale postocular stripe is usually interrupted, whereas the dark line connecting the anterior margins of the orbits is usually not interrupted; the two characters last mentioned show alliance with _guadalupensis_.

The carapace of hatchlings from the Colorado River is pale having whitish dots, smaller anteriorly than posteriorly, which may be encircled with dusky ocelli (TNHC 20257) or not (ANSP 11889, BCB 5055, SM 3282). Many hatchlings are not distinguishable from _pallidus_ (TCWC 7262, TNHC 4975, SM 4924, 6106). I have not seen hatchlings from the Colorado River that resemble ANSP 16717.

The pattern on the carapace of adult males from the Colorado River drainage resembles that of _guadalupensis_ (Pl. 41, bottom, right) but the whitish dots are usually smaller and may not be encircled with blackish ocelli (BCB 4066, TU 14485). An adult male (TU 14476) from the South Fork of the Llano River has whitish dots three millimeters in diameter and encircled with blackish ocelli (_guadalupensis_), whereas another adult male (USNM 83690) from a tributary of the Colorado, the South Concho River, resembles _pallidus_.

Eight specimens from the San Saba River (TU 14419 [6 specimens], 14439-40), that range in plastral length from 6.8 to 17.0 centimeters are impressive because of the dark brownish coloration on the carapace. The smallest individual, which is also the only male in the series, is paler. The mottled and blotched pattern on the females is therefore not contrasting; the largest females have elevated whitish prominences in the center of the carapace posteriorly. An immature male (UMMZ 70348) from the South Concho River also has a dark brown carapace, and lacks white dots. The dark coloration of the carapace of these specimens recalls the TU series of _T. s. emoryi_ from the Pecos River, Terrell County, Texas.

Color notes taken from a freshly-killed adult female from the Llano River, two miles west Llano (TU 16036.1, Pl. 42), are: pattern on carapace of dark olive or blackish marks that form an irregular reticulum or marbling on a paler background that varies from brownish to buff and has an orange or reddish tinge in some areas; small whitish spots posteriorly; pale rim yellowish, evident only at sides of carapace; dorsal surface of soft parts of body olive-green, becoming paler with yellowish tinge toward insertions of limbs and neck; no contrasting pattern on limbs or neck and head; yellowish on sides of body; ventral surface whitish lacking dark marks, yellowish at region of bridge, axillary region and on neck; chin olive-yellow.

_Comparisons._--_T. s. guadalupensis_ can be distinguished from all other subspecies of _T. spinifer_ in having: (1) large white dots, sometimes three millimeters in diameter, on a dark background usually surrounded with blackish ocelli and conspicuous on the anterior half of the carapace (some as large as those on posterior half) in adult males, and (2) whitish dots on the anterior half of the carapace, in hatchlings, that are often encircled with dark ocelli. _T. s.

guadalupensis_ resembles _pallidus_ and _emoryi_ in having white tubercles or dots on the carapace and therein differs from _spinifer_, _hartwegi_ and _asper_. _T. s. guadalupensis_ resembles _pallidus_ but differs from _emoryi_ in having a pale rim that is less than four times wider posteriorly than laterally. _T. s. guadalupensis_ resembles _emoryi_ but differs from _pallidus_, _spinifer_, _hartwegi_ and _asper_ in having along the anterior edge of the carapace tubercles that are flattened or wartlike prominences often lacking sharp tips in adult males; these tubercles are never conical in large females.

_T. s. guadalupensis_ has a wide head, a feature shared with the subspecies _asper_ and _emoryi_, but differs from _emoryi_ in having a wider carapace. _T. s. guadalupensis_ resembles _emoryi_ and _pallidus_ but differs from the other subspecies in having the carapace widest farther posterior than one-half the length of the carapace. The length of snout in _pallidus_ and _guadalupensis_ is shorter than in _spinifer_ and _hartwegi_ but is longer than in _emoryi_. _T. s. guadalupensis_ differs from _asper_ but resembles the other subspecies in having a relatively long plastron.

_Remarks._--Some individuals of _guadalupensis_ have characteristics that are applicable to _emoryi_. TNHC 12352 (Llano River) a hatchling, has conspicuous white dots confined to the posterior third of the carapace; the pale rim, however, is not widened posteriorly. TU 10156 (Guadalupe River) has a conspicuously widened pale rim on the carapace that is approximately 3.4 times wider posteriorly (8.5 mm.) than laterally (2.5 mm.).

_T. s. guadalupensis_ more closely resembles _pallidus_ than _emoryi_.

Turtles living in rivers that drain into the Gulf of Mexico east of the Guadalupe-San Antonio river system successively show increasing resemblance to _pallidus_ from west to east.

The expression of intergradation between _guadalupensis_ and _pallidus_ is of a clinal nature that involves parallel changes in the pattern on the snout, side of head, limbs (to a lesser degree), tuberculation along the anterior edge of the carapace, size of whitish tubercles or dots, and the distinctness of the blackish ocelli that surround the whitish dots on the carapace. These characters form a well-marked gradation or cline that extends over a considerable area.

There is, however, no continuous environmental gradient because the populations are relatively isolated by occupying adjacent drainage systems. The sharpest break in the gradation of characters mentioned above occurs between the Colorado River and Brazos River drainages.

The population of softsh.e.l.ls in the Colorado River drainage is actually an intergradient one, but more closely resembles _guadalupensis_, whereas the population in the Brazos River drainage more closely resembles _pallidus_. For convenience the turtles inhabiting the Colorado River drainage are referred to _guadalupensis_ and those in the Brazos River drainage to _pallidus_. Some individuals from farther west than the Colorado River drainage will resemble _pallidus_, and a few individuals from father east than the Brazos River drainage will resemble _guadalupensis_.

The gradation of some of the characters mentioned above terminates in the subspecies _emoryi_. It, however, has characters not found in _pallidus_ or _guadalupensis_, and is more distinct from either of those subspecies than either is from each other; the difference in characters as well as the break in the gradient of characters between _guadalupensis_ in the Nueces River drainage and _emoryi_ in the Rio Grande drainage is greater than that between _guadalupensis_ in the Colorado and _pallidus_ in the Brazos River drainages.

I have refrained from designating individuals between these three subspecies (_emoryi_, _guadalupensis_ and _pallidus_) as "intergrades"

on the distribution maps, and only mention (in text) those individuals whose characters show a decided tendency toward the adjacent subspecies. For further comments on intergradation see the account of _T. s. pallidus_.

_Specimens examined._--Total 97, as follows: TEXAS: _Bandera_: KU 50834, Hondo Creek, 4 mi. W Bandera; TNHC 797-98, 7 mi. SW Medina.

_Bexar_: ANSP 13447, Helotes; MCZ 4587; USNM 10789, 71009, San Antonio. _Borden_: BCB 4066, 7 mi. N Vincent. _Brown_: TNHC 7262, 1 mi. E Brownwood. _Comal_: USNM 7700, New Braunfels. _Dawson_: TNHC 21594-95, 10 mi. E Lamesa. _Frio_: USNM 7747, Rio Seco. _Gillespie_: TU 10185, 10187, 10205, Beaver Creek, "near" Doss. _Hays_: AMNH 29950-52, San Marcos. _Kerr_: SM 2553, headwaters Turtle Creek; TU 10142-45, 10147-65, 10176, 10833, Guadalupe River, 9 mi. SE Kerrville.

_Kimble_: BCB 5052-55, 6010, 3 mi. SE Telegraph; TU 14476, South Fork Llano River, 1.5 mi. SE Telegraph; TU 14485, Llano River, 10 mi. W Junction. _Lavaca_: SM 2554-55, 2559, 3 mi. NNE Hope. _Llano_: TNHC 12352, TU 16036 (2), Llano River, 2 mi. W Llano. _McMullen_: TNHC 1446, 10 mi. W Simmons, Live Oak County; UMMZ 89915-27, 15 mi. NE Tilden. _Matagorda_: ANSP 11889, Matagorda. _San Saba_: SM 6106; TU 14419 (6), 14439-40, San Saba River, 11 mi. NNW San Saba. _Tom Green_: SM 3282, UMMZ 70348, USNM 83690, South Concho River at Christoval.

_Travis_: SM 659-60, 8.5 mi. from mouth of Onion Creek in Colorado River near Austin; SM 4924, Onion Creek; TNHC 4975, Upper Bull Creek; TNHC 20257, Marshall Ford Dam. _Victoria_: CM 3118, Black Bayou; UMMZ 92752, San Antonio River, 3 mi. WSW Goliad; USNM 78515-17, Colleto Creek, Guadalupe River. _County unknown_: ANSP 16717; TNHC 1404.

_Records in the literature._--TEXAS: _Bandera_: 24 mi. WNW Medina (Brown, 1950:250). _Burnet_: Colorado River (Strecker, 1909:8).

_Gillespie_: 20 mi. N Harper (Brown, _loc. cit._). _Kendall_: Cibolo Creek at Boerne (Strecker, 1926:8). _Kerr_: Guadalupe River, 3 mi.

above Kerrville (TCWC 474, listed in card file). _Mason_: 12 mi. NE Mason (TCWC 3303, listed in card file). _Matagorda_: Bay City (Brown, _loc. cit._). _Real_: (Stejneger, 1944:66). _Wilson_: Cibolo River, 30 or 40 mi. N Sutherland Springs (Strecker, 1935:23).

=Trionyx spinifer pallidus= new subspecies

Pallid Spiny Softsh.e.l.l

Plates 39 and 40

_Holotype._--TU 484, alcoholic adult male; obtained from Lake Caddo, Caddo Parish, Louisiana on June 27, 1947, by Fred R. Cagle and party (Pl. 39, lower, left).

_Paratypes._--Forty-two specimens: TU 481, 490, 678 (hatchlings), TU 381, 472, 488 (immature males), TU 475, 478, 486, 1232, 1291, 10170 (adult males), TU 399, 487 (immature females), TU 469 (adult female), Caddo Lake, Caddo Parish, Louisiana; TU 15818 (immature male), TU 15819 (adult male), Cross Lake, Caddo Parish, Louisiana; TU 1253, 13211 (adult males), TU 13266 (immature female), Sabine River, 8 miles southwest Merryville, Beauregard Parish, Louisiana; TU 13281-82 (adult males), TU 13280, 13265 (immature females), TU 13303-04, 13306 (adult females), Sabine River, 8 miles southwest Negreet, Sabine Parish, Louisiana; SM 2375 (adult male), Wallace Bayou, De Soto Parish, Louisiana; TU 1122 (adult male), Laca.s.sine Refuge, Louisiana; UMMZ 92754 (adult male), 5 miles west Iowa, Calcasieu Parish, Louisiana; KU 40174-76, OU 27297 (adult males), OU 27290 (immature female), Lake Texoma, 2 mi. E Willis, Marshall County, Oklahoma; KU 50832 (hatchling), mouth of Caney Creek, 4 miles southwest Kingston, Marshall County, Oklahoma; CNHM 15474 (immature female), Kiowa County, Oklahoma; KU 2966-67 (immature females), KU 2934, 2947 (adult males), KU 2973 (adult female) Lewisville, Lafayette County, Arkansas.

_Description of holotype._--Carapace circular, widest at level of posterior edge of hyoplastra; margin entire; dorsal surface "sandpapery" to touch; pale rim separated from ground color of carapace by well-defined, slightly ragged, blackish line; pale rim approximately 2.1 times wider posteriorly (4.7 mm.) than it is laterally (2.2 mm.); pale rim increasingly narrower anteriorly, absent in nuchal region; tubercles along anterior edge of carapace triangular with sharp tips becoming flattened and inconspicuous at level of insertions of arms; ground color of carapace brownish having pattern of small whitish tubercles; most whitish tubercles inconspicuous, of pinpoint size, giving surface of carapace "sandpapery" effect; largest white tubercles posteriorly, approximately 1.2 millimeters in diameter; whitish tubercles smaller anteriorly, largest approximately 0.6 millimeters in diameter; whitish tubercles tend to form two parallel lines coincident with longitudinal sutures of neurals posteriorly in center of carapace; certain features of bony carapace evident through overlying skin; carapace highest in region of third and fourth neurals, forming obtuse, gently sloping, vertebral keel; undersurface of rear margin of carapace whitish having pinkish tinge and no markings; maximum length, 16.8 centimeters; greatest width, 14.3 centimeters.

Plastral surface extending slightly farther forward than carapace, whitish having pinkish tinge and no dark markings; anterior and posterior lobes rounded, posterior lobe more acutely; certain features of bony elements of plastron visible through overlying skin; maximum length, 12.2 centimeters.

Head extended, terminating in flexible snout; septal ridges projecting into each rounded nostril; tip of snout darkened; jaws open, each covered by fleshy lips except anteriorly where h.o.r.n.y portions exposed; dark triangular mark in front of eyes, base line uninterrupted, slightly curved anteriorly, connecting anterior margins of orbits; eyelids having blackish dots, especially upper, closing eyes; small blackish dots on dorsal surface of head; pale postocular stripe dark-bordered, interrupted; pale portion of stripe traversed by black line; pale subocular blotch margined by broken blackish border; side of head having contrasting blackish marks on pale background; postl.a.b.i.al stripe having lower blackish border on right side of head; chin with ill-defined marks, not contrasting on grayish background; well-defined, ragged black line on side of neck separating dorsal coloration from immaculate ventral coloration; small dark dots on dorsal surface of neck; dorsal surface of head and neck olive or brownish, becoming paler laterally and toward insertion of neck; maximum width of head, 2.1 centimeters.

Forefeet and hind feet well-webbed each having five digits; each limb having nails on first three digits; each forelimb with four antebrachial scales, three of which have free edge; each hind limb with two h.o.r.n.y scales, one smooth on posterodorsal surface and other with free edge on posteroventral surface; contrasting pattern of blackish marks, mostly roundish, on pale background of grayish-white.

Tail terminating in flexible point; p.e.n.i.s partly exposed; cloacal opening extending beyond posterior edge of carapace; tail having dorsal grayish band flanked by interrupted blackish lines; dark marks encroaching ventrally at tip of tail.

Undersurface of soft parts of body whitish, with pinkish tinge; dark marks lacking on soles, present on webbing and palms; dark marks arranged in linear fas.h.i.+on coincident with digits.

_Range._--Southern Oklahoma, eastern Texas, extreme southwestern Arkansas, and the western half of Louisiana; Red River drainage and rivers that drain into the Gulf of Mexico east of the Brazos River drainage in Texas and west of the Atchafalaya River drainage in Louisiana. The Brazos River drainage is inhabited by a population that more closely resembles _pallidus_ than _guadalupensis_ (see comments under subsection ent.i.tled "Remarks"; see map, Fig. 19).

_Diagnosis._--Juvenal pattern of white dots that are usually absent or inconspicuous, but sometimes distinct and small, on anterior third of carapace, and not surrounded with dark ocelli; white dots often absent on posterior half of carapace of hatchlings; white spots, rarely as large as two millimeters in diameter, not encircled with black ocelli on adult males; pale rim of carapace less than four times wider posteriorly than laterally.

_Description._--Plastral length of smallest hatchling, 3.3 centimeters (KU 50832); of largest male, 16.0 centimeters (SM 2375); of largest female, 30.5 centimeters (TU 13213).

North American Recent Soft-shelled Turtles (Family Trionychidae) Part 14

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