Taxonomic assessment of Alligator Snapping Turtles (Chelydridae: Macrochelys), with the description of two new species from the southeastern United States
Author
Thomas, Travis M.
Author
Granatosky, Michael C.
Author
Bourque, Jason R.
Author
Krysko, Kenneth L.
Author
Moler, Paul E.
Author
Gamble, Tony
Author
Suarez, Eric
Author
Leone, Erin
Author
Enge, Kevin M.
Author
Roman, Joe
text
Zootaxa
2014
3786
2
141
165
journal article
46017
10.11646/zootaxa.3786.2.4
a4d5783e-d852-4210-b8b0-27972739baf4
1175-5326
253006
06D44DCE-0816-459A-A201-171F273BC210
Macrochelys suwanniensis
sp. nov.
Common name
. Suwannee Alligator Snapping Turtle
Holotype
.
UF 166146, adult male skeleton from Santa Fe River and State Road 235, Alachua County, Florida (
29.87872o N
,
82.33619o W
, datum WGS84, elev.
23 m
), found dead, apparently from gunshot wounds, in very low water in 2003 by Jason R. Bourque (see
Figures 10
,
11
,
12
). (Suwannee lineage;
Figure 9
).
Paratypes
.
UF 22267, partial skeleton from Santa Fe River, near Town of Santa Fe, Alachua County, Florida, on
9 April 1962
by George R. Zug; UF 12694, partial skeleton from Fletcher Spring, Lafayette County, Florida (
29.84672o N
,
82.89256o W
, elev.
9 m
), on
19 November 1961
by B. Sites, D. Desautels, and D. Young.
Diagnosis.
Macrochelys suwanniensis
is distinguished by the following: carapacial caudal notch very wide and lunate (
Figure 10
), usually comprising the pygal and peripheral
set 11
(shared with
Chelydra
); pygal sutured medially (composed of two bones) often with no serrations; Peripheral 11 with 1–2 serrations; distal rib end of costal 1 enters posterior third of peripheral 3; pleural scute
set 1
with broad overlap onto the nuchal; dermal scale on the frontals very wide; processus trochlearis oticum with developed proximal and distal protuberances; squamosal contacts opisthotic anteriorly when viewed in dorsal aspect; mandible broad with expanded triturating surfaces and developed labial rugosity just anterior to the coronoid; posterior projection of the squamosal acutely angled in lateral aspect, dorsally straight or downwardly directed, and posteriorly extensive past the plane of the quadrate (
Figure 11
).
FIGURE 8.
Polygons showing the principal component scores (and associated percent of variability explained by each component) for carapace morphometric measurements (caudal notch width, caudal notch area, caudal notch depth) from 104 alligator snapping turtles by lineage (Suwannee n=28, central n=15, and western n=61).
Comments.
Most carapaces of
Macrochelys suwanniensis
exhibited a medially sutured pygal. This feature is significant when considering caudal notch width and is likely at least part of the reason this species possesses the widest caudal notch amongst congeners. The extra suture may allow the caudal notch to expand as the turtle grows larger. This is in contrast to
M. temminckii
, which possesses a single unsutured pygal bone and consequently the narrowest caudal notch of extant
Macrochelys
. Peripheral 11 is usually doubly serrated; i.e., the serrations that are typically contained on the pygal bone in the western and central species have migrated onto the 11th peripheral set in
M. suwanniensis
.
Distribution.
Restricted to the Suwannee River drainage in Florida and
Georgia
.
Etymology.
Specific epithet refers to combination of the new Latin
suwanni–
(referring to the Suwannee River) and the Latin
–ensis
(belongs to the) to form the composite noun
suwanniensis
.
Specimens examined.
See Appendix.