Singapore’s herpetofauna: updated and annotated checklist, history, conservation, and distribution
Author
Figueroa, Alex
Author
Low, Martyn E. Y.
0000-0001-7927-7149
martyn.low@nus.edu.sg
Author
Lim, Kelvin K. P.
0000-0002-0638-9198
kelvinlim@nus.edu.sg
text
Zootaxa
2023
2023-05-18
5287
1
1
378
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5287.1.1
journal article
53474
10.11646/zootaxa.5287.1.1
90d83153-c065-4771-9ac7-35dda67996b5
1175-5326
7960319
78E23714-8973-4755-BC94-0A751D7D2B37
Dermochelys coriacea
(Vandellii, 1761)
—
Visitor.
Testudo coriacea
Vandelli 1761: 1
, 7–9, pl. 2.
Holotype
: MZP unnumbered (formerly ZMUP), according to
Fretey & Bour (1980: 198)
.
Type locality: “maris Tyrrheni oram in agro
Laurentiano
” (=
Italy
);
later restricted to “
Palermo
,
Sicily
”,
Italy
by
Smith
&
Taylor
(1950a: 315, 1950b: 13);
later restricted to “la côte romaine (Italie), Mer Tyrrhénienne, Méditerranée occidentale” (=
Italy
) by
Fretey & Bour
(1980: 198);
later restricted to “Laurentum, between Lido di Ostia and Tor Paterno, shore of the Tyrrhenian Sea,
Italy
” by
Bour & Dubois (1984: 359)
.
Leatherback Turtle
(
Figure 8E & 8F
)
Singapore
records.
Sphargis coriacea
—
Knight, 1884: 3
(Siglap).
Dermochelys coriacea
—
Flower, 1896: 857
.—
Hanitsch, 1898: 8
.—
Flower, 1899: 609
.—Ridley, 1899: 205.—Hanitsch, 1908: 37.—
Boulenger, 1912: 30
(
Singapore
Straits).—
Hanitsch, 1912b: 14
.— Sharma, 1973: 234.—
Gremli, 1988: 62
.—K.K.P. Lim & L.M. Chou, 1990: 56.—K.K.P. Lim & F.L.K.
Lim, 1992: 135
, 151.—L.M.
Chou
et al.
, 1994: 105
.—E.K.
Chua, 2007b: 28
.—H.T.W. Tan
et al.
, 2007: 119.—P.K.A. Ng, 2009: 25.—T.H. Ng & K.K.P. Lim, 2010: 119.—H.T.W. Tan
et al.
, 2010: 158.—L.M.
Chou, 2011: 77
.—P.K.L. Ng
et al.
, 2011: 362.
Dermatochelys
[sic]
coriacea
—Ridley, 1899: 188 (Tanjong Katong).
Remarks.
Dermochelys coriacea
is known from
Singapore
from a single specimen collected on
14 December 1883
by Skinner at Siglap (
Fig. 8E
) who discovered locals trying to encourage it from the beach back into the sea (
Knight 1884
). The records from
Singapore
Straits in
Boulenger (1912)
and Tanjong Katong in Ridley (1899) both refer to the same specimen. The only other record of
D. coriacea
in
Singapore
is from CAS 22249 whose catalogue notes state it was purchased from Turtox, a general biological supply company; thus, the locality may be unreliable. Although not collected in Singapore’s waters, another specimen was found trapped in a damaged fish trap at Kampung Batu Jawa,
Johor
Bahru,
Malaysia
on
11 March 1905
(
Kloss 1907
). TTWG (2021) does not include
Singapore
in the nesting or foraging range of
D. coriacea
, but includes
Malaysia
under nesting distribution.
Terengganu
,
Malaysia
was renowned for its gathering of nesting
D. coriacea
(Moll 1976)
with 37,654 sightings being recorded between 1967 and 1976 (
Chua 1988
). Regrettably, the nesting population has since collapsed from a total of 10,000 nests in 1956 to 100 nests by 1995 (
Chan & Liew 1996
). The movement patterns of these turtles are unknown, but given Terengganu’s proximity to
Singapore
, we suspect
D. coriacea
forages in or transits through Singapore’s waters.
Occurrence.
Visitor. Rare.
Singapore
conservation status.
Not Evaluated.
Conservation priority.
Lowest.
IUCN conservation status.
Vulnerable [2013].
LKCNHM
&
NHMUK
Museum specimens. Siglap:
ZRC
.2.179 (
14-Dec-1883
)
.
Additional
Singapore
museum specimens.
Singapore
(no locality):
CAS.
Singapore
localities.
Siglap*.