New species of fresh water turtle discovered in the USA
08/08/2010 14:13:55
USGS researchers discovered a new species of turtle. The Pearl River map turtle makes its home in the Pearl River of Louisiana and Mississippi.
The Pearl River map turtle
August 2010. A new species of turtle no bigger than a small dinner plate has been discovered, bringing the number of native turtle species in the U.S.A. to 57.
Only found in Louisiana and Mississippi
The Pearl River map turtle, discovered by scientists from the U.S. Geological Survey, is found only in the Pearl River in Louisiana and Mississippi. It is a relict of sea-level fluctuations between glacial and interglacial periods over 10,000 years ago, which isolated map turtles in different rivers along the Gulf Coast. Eventually, the turtles evolved into unique species confined to a single river system.
USGS scientists Josh Ennen and Jeff Lovich said the turtle, whose new scientific name is Graptemys pearlensis, had previously been confused with another turtle species in a nearby river, the Pascagoula map turtle.
Similar to Pascagoula map turtle
Like the Pascagoula map turtle, the Pearl River map turtle is a native freshwater reptile that lives in large rivers to medium-sized streams. Females are much larger than males, measuring between 6 and 11 inches as adults, and use large crushing surfaces on their jaws to open clams. Males, meanwhile, grow to a comparatively puny 4 to 6 inches and eat some mollusks, but mostly insects and fish.
The discovery, published in Chelonian Conservation and Biology, is a reminder that there are still exciting discoveries to be made - and one doesn't necessarily have to go far to make them, said Ennen.
"We don't know as much as we sometimes think we do," said Ennen. "When people think about discovery and new species, they think of rainforests, or unexplored and isolated countries. Coming from southern Mississippi, I basically found this turtle in my own backyard."
Genetic testing
Ennen discovered the species while doing other research on Graptemys species in the region for his Ph.D. dissertation. "The Pascagoula River map turtle was one of the only map turtle species believed to occur in two major drainages. I thought it was strange that it was such an anomaly. My professors, Brian Kreiser and Carl Qualls at the University of Southern Mississippi, encouraged me to look further, so I started doing genetic research on the turtles from the Pearl River and the turtles from the Pascagoula River."
Once he started finding significant genetic differences between the two turtles, Ennen called USGS scientist Jeff Lovich onto the scene. Lovich had found, described and named the last two turtle species - also of the genus Graptemys -discovered in the United States in 1992. During his own research in the 80's, Lovich had noticed subtle differences between the turtles in each river, but had not thought they were different species. "Josh asked me to reanalyze my data on colour and the way the turtles look to combine with the genetic data," Lovich said.
Visual clue
Altogether, the data was enough to make it plain: the Pearl River map turtle and the Pascagoula River map turtle are definitely two different species. The genetic data was clear on this, though the visual differences are more subtle -- one of the most obvious is the Pearl River map turtle sports a continuous black stripe down its back whereas the Pascagoula map turtle has a broken black stripe.
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