Chelus fimbriata (Schneider, 1783) is a animal in the Chelidae family, order null, kingdom Animalia. Not known to be toxic.

Photo of Chelus fimbriata (Schneider, 1783) (Chelus fimbriata (Schneider, 1783))
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Chelus fimbriata (Schneider, 1783)

Chelus fimbriata (Schneider, 1783)

Chelus fimbriata (mata mata) is a large sedentary aquatic turtle found across northern South America, with specialized camouflage anatomy.

Family
Genus
Chelus
Order
Class
Testudines

About Chelus fimbriata (Schneider, 1783)

Chelus fimbriata, commonly called the mata mata, is a large, sedentary turtle species. Its key anatomical features include a large triangular flattened head covered in many skin tubercles and flaps, plus a distinct spike on its long tubular snout. Three barbels grow on the chin, and four more filamentous barbels are present on the upper jaw, which is neither hooked nor notched. Adult mata mata have a brown or black oblong carapace that reaches up to 45 cm (18 in) long, with a full adult weight of 17.2 kg (38 lb). The species' plastron is reduced, narrowed, hingeless, shorter toward the front, and deeply notched at the rear, with narrow bridges. This body shape likely helps the turtle resemble a piece of bark, camouflaging it from potential predators. The plastron and bridges range in color from cream to yellow or brown. For adult individuals, the head, neck, tail, and limbs are grayish brown. The mata mata's neck is longer than the vertebra beneath its carapace, and is fringed with small skin flaps along both sides. Hatchlings have a pink to reddish tinge along the underside edge of their carapaces and plastrons, which gradually fades as the turtles grow. Each forefoot has five webbed claws. Males can be distinguished from females by their concave plastrons, and longer, thicker tails. Mata mata inhabit slow-moving streams, stagnant pools, marshes, and swamps across northern Bolivia, eastern Peru, eastern Ecuador, southeastern Colombia, the eastern Guianas, and northern and central Brazil. This is a strictly aquatic species, and prefers to stand in shallow water where its snout can reach the surface to breathe. During reproduction, males display for females by extending their limbs, lunging their heads toward females with their mouths open, and moving the lateral flaps on their heads. In the Upper Amazon, nesting takes place from October through December. Each clutch contains 12 to 28 brittle, spherical eggs, each 35 mm in diameter.

Photo: (c) whitezelda, all rights reserved, uploaded by whitezelda

Taxonomy

Animalia Chordata Testudines Chelidae Chelus

More from Chelidae

Sources: GBIF, iNaturalist, Wikipedia, NCBI Taxonomy · Disclaimer

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