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Terrapin

Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience

A diamond terrapin turtle, a small freshwater species known for its distinctive shell pattern.

Terrapins, also called water tortoises, are a group of reptiles that live in fresh or brackish water. They belong to the order Testudines. They have clawed feet like tortoises, not flippers like marine turtles. In American English, people often call them marsh, pond, or tide-water turtles. Some species are known as pond sliders.

Many terrapins mainly eat animals. This makes them carnivorous. They eat things like amphibians, arthropods, freshwater fish, and molluscs. But some terrapins also eat plants.

Terrapins are part of the taxonomic family Emydidae. They may not all be closely related. Some terrapins belong to other families too, like Geoemydidae, Pelomedusidae, Podocnemididae, and Chelydridae. Even though they live in water, terrapins often come to land. They like to warm up by basking in the sun.

Etymology

Diamondback terrapin

The word "terrapin" comes from an old word in the Algonquian languages: torope. It described a special kind of turtle called the diamondback terrapin. When Europeans explored North America, they brought this name back to their countries. Today, people use "terrapin" to talk about certain freshwater turtles in English.

Because of this turtle, part of the War of 1812 was called "the Terrapin War." This was because, during the war, the United States felt trapped and safe, just like a terrapin hiding in its shell.

Species

The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species checks how safe animals are. Many terrapin species are in danger, from vulnerable to critically endangered.

Terrapins are types of water turtles that live in fresh or brackish water. They have claws on their feet, unlike sea turtles, which have flippers. This list shows some terrapin species, but it changes as scientists discover more.

FamilyGenusSpecies
(subspecies)
common nameNative natural habitat rangeIUCN Red List statusCurrent population trend
ChelydridaeChelydraacutirostris
ChelydridaeChelydrarossignonii
Mexican snapping turtle
Yucatán snapping turtle
VU IUCN
ChelydridaeChelydraserpentinaLC IUCN
ChelydridaeMacrochelystemminckiiEN IUCN
EmydidaeActinemysmarmorataVU IUCN
EmydidaeClemmysguttata
southern Canada
eastern United States
the eastern Great Lakes
EN IUCN
EmydidaeEmydoideablandingii
North American Great Lakes
parts of the US Great Plains
New England coastal lands
EN IUCNdecreasing
EmydidaeEmysorbicularisNT IUCN
EmydidaeGlyptemysmuhlenbergiiCR IUCN
EmydidaeGlyptemysinsculptaEN IUCN
EmydidaeMalaclemysterrapinVU IUCN
EmydidaeTrachemysscripta (elegans)
red-eared terrapin
EmydidaeTrachemysscripta (scripta)
yellow-bellied terrapin
GeoemydidaeBataguraffinisCR IUCN
GeoemydidaeBatagurbaskaCR IUCN
GeoemydidaeBatagurborneoensisCR IUCN
GeoemydidaeBatagurdhongokaCR IUCN
GeoemydidaeBatagurkachugaCR IUCN
GeoemydidaeBatagurtrivittataCR IUCN
Geoemydidae
(Bataguridae)
Mauremyscaspica
striped-neck terrapin
NA IUCN
Geoemydidae
(Bataguridae)
Mauremysleprosa
Iberian pond turtle
Mediterranean pond turtle
VU IUCN
Geoemydidae
(Bataguridae)
MauremysmusticaCR IUCNdecreasing
GeoemydidaeMauremysrivulata
western Caspian turtle
LC IUCN
GeoemydidaeMelanochelystrijuga
Indian black turtle
GeoemydidaeMoreniaocellata
Burmese eyed turtle
Burmese peacock turtle
GeoemydidaeRhinoclemmysrubida
Mexican spotted wood turtle
GeoemydidaeSiebenrockiellacrassicollis
smiling terrapin
EN IUCN
PelomedusidaePelusioscastaneusLC IUCN
PelomedusidaePelusiosseychellensis
Seychelles mud turtle
EX IUCN
PelomedusidaePelusiossinuatusLC IUCN
PelomedusidaePelusiossubniger
black-bellied hinged terrapin
LC IUCN
PlatysternidaePlatysternonmegacephalumCR IUCN
PodocnemididaeErymnochelysmadagascariensisCR IUCN

Conventions

Conservation status codes follow the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Red List of Threatened Species. We try to show maps to help you see where each species lives. If we cannot show a map, we will describe the area instead. Any species or subspecies that no longer exist and disappeared after the year 1500 CE are marked with a dagger symbol "†".

Images

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Related articles

This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Terrapin, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

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