Pseudemys peninsularis Carr, 1938 is a animal in the Emydidae family, order null, kingdom Animalia. Not known to be toxic.

Photo of Pseudemys peninsularis Carr, 1938 (Pseudemys peninsularis Carr, 1938)
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Pseudemys peninsularis Carr, 1938

Pseudemys peninsularis Carr, 1938

Pseudemys peninsularis, the peninsula cooter, is an average emydid turtle widespread in peninsular Florida.

Family
Genus
Pseudemys
Order
Class
Testudines

About Pseudemys peninsularis Carr, 1938

The peninsula cooter (Pseudemys peninsularis Carr, 1938) is an average-sized species in the turtle family Emydidae. It most often reaches a carapace length of 9 to 13 inches (23–33 cm) and a weight of 5 to 15 pounds (2.27-6.8 kg), though some individuals can grow larger than 16 inches (40.64 cm) and weigh over 35 pounds (15.876 kg). Peninsula cooters can be told apart from Florida red-bellied cooters (Pseudemys nelsoni) by two key traits: peninsula cooters do not have a reddish plastron, and they have dozens of yellow stripes across their carapace, limbs, head, and tail. Males can be distinguished from females both by their smaller overall size and by their much longer, elongated front claws. Males use these elongated claws to stimulate females before mating. This species is widespread across peninsular Florida, where it lives in rivers, ponds, and lakes.

Photo: (c) gherman315, some rights reserved (CC BY-NC) · cc-by-nc

Taxonomy

Animalia Chordata Testudines Emydidae Pseudemys

More from Emydidae

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

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