Turtles and tortoises of Syria: Diversity, distribution, and conservation
Author
Aidek, Ahmad E.
General Commission for Scientific Agricultural Research, Deir ez-Zor, Syria
Author
Saad, Adib
Al-Manara University, Latakia, Syria
Author
Jablonski, Daniel
Department of Zoology, Comenius University in Bratislava, Ilkovičova 6, Mlynská dolina, 842 15 Bratislava, Slovakia
Author
Esterbauer, Hans
Johann-Puch-Strasse 27 / III / 5, 4400 Steyr, Austria
Author
Fritz, Uwe
Museum of Zoology, Senckenberg Dresden, A. B. Meyer Building, 01109 Dresden, Germany
text
Zootaxa
2024
2024-09-06
5506
2
151
193
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5506.2.1
journal article
303278
10.11646/zootaxa.5506.2.1
376491fe-cadb-454b-82bb-16edc4df6ef8
1175-5326
13746744
F51D2CFF-49FF-4ED9-8A44-1FD0F1B10379
Testudo graeca terrestris
Forskål, 1775
Mesopotamian Tortoise, Levantine Tortoise (
Fig. 20
)
IUCN Red List Category (
Testudo graeca
)
: Vulnerable (VU A1cd).
Type locality
: “Lohajae ..&.. Kahirae..&.. Aleppo..&..
Libanon
” [Al Luhayyah ..&.. Cario ..&.. Aleppo ..&.. Mount
Lebanon
]. Restricted to Arabien [Arabia] by
Wermuth (1956)
, to “Libanon-Gebirge,
Israel
” [
Lebanon
Mountains,
Israel
] by
Wermuth (1958)
, to “environs d’Alep (=
Halab
),
Syrie
” [
Syria
] by
Bour (1989)
, and validly to “
Aleppo
(
Alep
,
Halab
;
36°12’N
,
37°09’E
),
Syria
(
Syrian Arab Republic
)” by
neotype
designation (
Perälä & Bour 2004
).
Type specimen
:
Original
syntypes
lost;
neotype
designated by
Perälä & Bour (2004)
;
Naturhistorisches Museum
Wien,
NMW 18674
:2.
Chorotype
: Turano-Mediterranean.
First records for
Syria
:
Latakia
,
Aleppo
(
Forskål 1775
).
Literature data
:
Aleppo
(
Boettger 1880
),
Aleppo
,
Homs
,
Hamah
, Palmyra, near
Damascus
(
Lortet 1883
),
Aleppo
(
Siebenrock 1913
),
Homs
Lake (
Boulenger 1923
)
Aleppo
,
Tartous
(
Werner 1919
,
1935
), between
Homs
and T-4 (Al-Furuklus;
Schmidt 1939
), Golan (
Werner & Avital 1980
;
Berger-Dell’mour 1986
),
Aleppo
,
Latakia
,
Homs
,
Hamah
,
Damascus
, Al-Qunaitra, Al-Hamidiyah (N Al-Qunaitra), Khan Arnabah (= Khan Uraynibah), Al-Ka’b, N and NW Taranjah, NW and W Hadar, S Arnah, W Majdal Shams (= Megdel Shams;
Esterbauer 1985a
,
1985b
,
1992
), SE Jabal Al-Arab (Dzabal ad Druz;
Veselý 1991
), Golan and Mount Hermon (
Sivan & Werner 1992
), Mesiaf, Slenfeh, Al-Barah (
Bischoff & Schmidtler 1994
), Seidnaya, Mesiaf, Jabal Al-Arab (= Jebel ed Drouz),
Al-Hasaka
(
Fritz
et al.
1996
), Jabal Al-Arab (= Djebel Druz;
Bischoff
et al.
1998
),
5 km
north of Sweida (
Moravec & Orszagh 1998
),
Najran
(
Lymberakis & Kalionzopoulou 2003
), Al-Badia near Palmyra, Fir-Cedar Reserve (
Sindaco
et al.
2006
), Palmyra (
Fritz
et al
. 1996
), Tahonat Al-Halawa, Slenfeh (
Amr
et al.
2007
), Sweida, Qanawat, Rashiedeh, Seidnaya, Maalula, Mesiaf, Ain Al-Beidah, Jourin, Qal’at Samaan (
Široký
et al.
2007
), Maalula, Seidnaya, Ain Al-Beida, Qal’at Merza, Mesiaf, Al-Kafr, Sweida, between Sweida and Salah, Dar Ta’zah, Qal’at Samaan (
Fritz
et al.
2007
), Al-Qerdaha, Al-Boudi, Dhahr Drekeish, Jabla, Al-Bassah (
Mhanna
et al.
2021
).
FIGURE 20.
Coloration of
Testudo graeca terrestris
. (
A
) Al-Hardana, north of Mesopotamia (photo: Mohammed Al-Karraf); (
B
) Maqta’ Hajar, northeast Aleppo (photo: Ahmad Aidek); (
C
) Majdalun Al-Bustan, coastal region (photo: Ali Ali); (
D
) AlBassah, coastal region (photo: Ali Alloush); (
E
) Sadd Al-Kafat, southeast Hamah (photo: Ehab Jbr); (
F
) as-Sabbourah, west of Damascus (photo: Wa’el Almatni); (
G
) Masil Al-Fawwar, southwestern Syria (photo: Hans Esterbauer); (
H
) hatchling, Shahba, Jabal Al-Arab (photo: Ahmad Aidek); (
I
) hatchling, Tell Sheihan, Jabal Al-Arab (photo: Wa’el Almatni).
FIGURE 21.
Records of
Testudo graeca terrestris
in Syria. Black circles: previous records, blue circles: recently confirmed previous records, red circles: new records.
Museum specimens
:
Syria
(
FMNH
19715, 1846936,
MNHN
1883.640,
SMF
55201, 7821, 47365,
NHMUK
1976.437, 1976.441), northern
Syria
(
NMW
34350:1),
Aleppo
(
MNHN
1988.6790, 1988.6965,
SMF
7830,
NMW
1908:1, 18672:1–2, 18673:1–2, 30094:1–2, 18674:1–2), Naseeb (
NMW
18520:1),
Damascus
(
RMNH
. RENA.14045), near
Damascus
(
INHS
10289),
10 km
E
Deir ez-Zor
(
ZFMK
86656–86659),
1 km
N Atil (
ZFMK
64939), ruins of Apamea (
ZFMK
30537),
Homs
(
NHMUK
1909.4.20.1, 1970.1860),
Al-Hasaka
(
MTD
32111), Jabal Al-Arab (
MTD
47365), Camp Fanar, Golan (
NMW
30859:1), Golan (
NMW
26789:1–3, 26810:1, 33203:1– 21, 33204:1, 34347:1,
HUJ
120719, 120732, 120736–20739, 120762), Wadi Daraa (= Wadidra;
NMW
34348:1), Mt. Hermon (
NMW
34349:1), Slenfeh (
JUSTM
0202), Tahonat Al-Halawa (
JUSTM
201), E Al-Rashiedeh (
NMP-P
6V 34915, 70504).
Citizen science records
: Ad-Difleh, Ain Aaisheh, Ain at-Teineh, Ain ej-Jajeh, Al-Breikhiyeh, Al-Jbeiliyeh, Al-Khaldiyeh, Al-Kneisat, Al-Maliyeh, Al-Marqab, Al-Mzeiraa, Al-Qallouf, Al-Sqeilbiyeh, ash-Shabtaliyah, ash-Shamiyeh, ash-Sheikh Badr, as-Sarsakiyah, as-Sarsakiyah, as-Sukkariyeh, at-Tabrah, at-Teiha, Balluran, Baq’u, Bashbatah,Al-Hasriyeh, Beit Al-Jabal, Beit Nafleh, Beit Shouhr, Burj Islam, Burmanah, Fadrah, Ghmam, Habbabah, Haffah, Hammam Al-Qarahleh, Jneinat Raslan, Jubb Al-Amlas, Jubb Ramlah, Kafr Sneif, Kafriyeh ash-Sharqiyeh, Kersana, Kherbat Abu Hamdan, Kherbat aj-Jouziyeh, Kherbat Al-Fars, Nab’Al-Ghaqah, Nab’ Al-Sakher, Palmyra, Safita, Salma, Sarai, Squbeen, Um et-Toyour (iNaturalist 2023).
Recent records
: Abu Qubays,
2 km
N Urman, Ain Al-Feijeh, aj-Jumrkiyeh, Al-Amriyeh, Al-Badrosiyah, Al-Bahlouliyah, Al-B’ath, Al-Bassah, Al-Dali, Al-Furunlok, Al-Haffah, Al-Hardana, Al-Jabboul, Al-Kadmous, Al-Mazra’a, Al-Mismiyeh, Al-Qerdaha, Al-T’amri, Al-Wadi’a, Azaz, Banias, Bennesh, Binjaru, Drekeish,
Homs
, Jaiboul, Jabla, Jaddu’h—Salamiyah, Jariz, Kherbat Al-Hamam, Kherbat Hazzour,
Latakia
, Majdalun Al-Bustan, Maqta’ Hajar, Muhasan, Qiroun, Safita, Sahnaya, Salamiyah, Salhab, Sadd Al-Kafat, Shahba, Souran, Sweida, Tell Sheihan, Tnakha, Tseil,
Tartous
, W of Ya’four, Wadi Barada.
Distribution in
Syria
: Common. The distribution of
T. g.
terrestris
extends from east of
Aleppo
westwards. It occurs throughout the coastal region, extending east beyond the Orontes Basin, then south into the
Damascus
area, the Lebanon Mountains, the southwestern region of Jabal Al-Arab, and the Golan and Mount Hermon, with few records from the northeast near the Turkish border (
Fig. 21
).
Lortet (1883)
mentioned that tortoises were common in the region of Palmyra (also mentioned in
Fritz
et al
. 1996
). This was the only record for this region for a long time, despite field surveys conducted by many researchers. Also, the senior author of this study did not record any tortoises during dozens of field trips to Palmyra and the Al-Badia between 2006 and 2013. However, it must be remembered that Lortet reported tortoises for this area 150 years ago, and the habitat has certainly changed since then. Thus, it cannot be excluded that
T. graeca
once occurred there, but has become extremely rare or disappeared since
Lortet’s (1883)
observations. Indeed, there is a photographic record of a tortoise from the Al-Badia taken between 1996 and 1999 (
Sindaco
et al.
2006
), and a photo of a juvenile from Palmyra was published on iNaturalist in 2018. However, the latter photo shows that the colors and texture of the shell are similar to tortoises from the coastal region of
Syria
, rather than the morphotypes found in arid habitats, suggestive of an introduced individual.
In
northeastern
Syria
, tortoises are very rare.
One
individual was found in
August 1991
near
Al-Hasaka
close to the
Turkish
border (
MTD 32111
, see also
Fritz
et al
. 1996
), and another specimen was found in
June
2020
in
Al-Hardana
, also near the Turkish border (
Fig. 20A
). During dozens of field trips throughout the area between 2006 and 2023, no other tortoises were found, but locals confirmed that they are present but rare (Aidek pers. observ.)
.
There are also few records from the Euphrates region. In 1999, four tortoises were obtained from
10 km
east of
Deir ez-Zor
(ZFMK 86656–86659). These specimens are probably escaped or captive tortoises. This is suggested by the “locality names” of the ZFMK specimens, as these are names of people, not of sites. Two tortoises were also seen on agricultural land in Muhasan,
20 km
east of
Deir ez-Zor
, in fall 2021.
Remarks
: Syrian tortoises are characterized by a great variety of coloration. The primary color of the shell varies from yellowish beige with various shades of light and dark brown, orange and gray to very dark
types
with a primary black shell coloration. Tortoises from the humid coastal region are generally characterized by a shiny shell and lighter colors compared to tortoises from the
Lebanon
Mountains and the semi-arid area east of
Aleppo
. Tortoises from the black basalt regions (Jabal Al-Arab) are generally black or dark gray and dull in color (
Fig. 20
; see also
Fritz
et al.
1996
,
2007
). Variation beyond
Syria
is discussed in
Fritz
et al.
(2007)
and
Türkozan
et al.
(2023)
.
There are 117 records from
Syria
on GBIF. However, of these supposedly Syrian records, 10 are not from
Syria
. Another 76 records are on iNaturalist (2023). Many of these have incorrect coordinates and are in the sea, some are duplicates and refer to other sites.