Graptemys barbouri Carr & Marchand, 1942 is a animal in the Emydidae family, order null, kingdom Animalia. Not known to be toxic.

Photo of Graptemys barbouri Carr & Marchand, 1942 (Graptemys barbouri Carr & Marchand, 1942)
🦋 Animalia

Graptemys barbouri Carr & Marchand, 1942

Graptemys barbouri Carr & Marchand, 1942

Graptemys barbouri is a sexually size-dimorphic map turtle native to rivers of the southeastern United States.

Family
Genus
Graptemys
Order
Class
Testudines

About Graptemys barbouri Carr & Marchand, 1942

Graptemys barbouri, commonly known as Barbour's map turtle, shows a large size difference between adult males and adult females. On average, adult males have a straight-line carapace length of 3.5 to 5.5 inches (8.9 to 14.0 cm). Adult females are much larger, with straight-line carapace lengths ranging from 6 to 12.5 inches (15 to 32 cm); females reach very large sizes and have significantly enlarged heads. This species has black-tipped spines on its second, third, and fourth vertebral scutes. These spines are very prominent in males, and resemble a dorsal fin. G. barbouri is found in rivers across three locations in the southeastern United States: southeastern Alabama, the western panhandle of Florida, and southwestern Georgia. This turtle prefers deeper river habitats near rocky areas that contain large amounts of woody debris.

Photo: (c) Todd Pierson, some rights reserved (CC BY-NC-SA) · cc-by-nc-sa

Taxonomy

Animalia Chordata Testudines Emydidae Graptemys

More from Emydidae

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

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