Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-rdxmf Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-22T15:18:51.699Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Marine records of the Nile soft-shelled turtle, Trionyx triunguis from Turkey

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 March 2009

Ertan Taskavak*
Affiliation:
Department of Basic Sciences, Faculty of Fisheries, Ege University, Izmir, Turkey
Salim Can Akcinar
Affiliation:
Department of Basic Sciences, Faculty of Fisheries, Ege University, Izmir, Turkey
*
Correspondence should be addressed to: Ertan Taskavak, Department of Basic Sciences, Faculty of Fisheries, Ege University, Izmir, Turkey email: [email protected]
Get access

Abstract

The Nile soft-shelled turtle, Trionyx triunguis is known from the riverine and coastal environments of eastern Mediterranean countries (Turkey, Syria, Lebanon and Israel) and most of Africa, except for the waterways of the southern, north-western, and northern part of the continent. Trionyx triunguis is a mainly freshwater species adapted to moderately deep to shallow streams, rivers, estuarine systems and lakes with sandy muddy bottoms. The data on the presence of this species from the marine environment are rather recent and considerably scattered. Here, we present seven marine records of T. triunguis obtained from scientific and commercial fisheries operations, coastal bone remainders and the observations of a SCUBA diver. The records were collected from eastern and western parts of the Turkish Mediterranean coasts at depths from 5 to 55 metres. A specimen with 108.4 cm straight carapace length (SCL) caught at ~55 m depth with a bottom trawl in Iskenderun Bay is likely to be the biggest recorded to date. Furthermore, behavioural observations and an underwater photograph were given for another specimen observed by a SCUBA diver at 15 m depth. The results may suggest that the Nile soft-shells are well adapted to the marine environment.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom 2009

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Atatur, M.K. (1979) Investigations on the morphology and osteology, biotope and distribution in Anatolia of Trionyx triunguis (Reptilia, Testudines) with some observations on its biology. Ege University Faculty of Science Monographs, Izmir, Turkey 18, 175.Google Scholar
Atatur, M.K. (1991) Survival chance of the Nile soft-shelled turtle, Trionyx triunguis (Forskål, 1775) in the Dalyan area. Report to WWF and DHKD, 4 pp.Google Scholar
Deraniyagala, P.E.P. (1948) Some scientific results of two visits to Africa. Spoila Zeylanica 25, 142.Google Scholar
Ernst, C.H.R., Altenburg, G.M. and Barbour, R.W. (2002) Turtles of the World. Expert Taxonomic Institute, Institute of Systematic and Population Biology, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands. Springer-Verlag, UNESCO. CD-ROM Windows & McIntosh versions. Continuous revision.Google Scholar
Flower, S.S. (1933) Notes on the recent reptiles and amphibians of Egypt with a list of the species recorded from that Kingdom. Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London 1933, 735851.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Forskål, P. (1775) Descriptiones Animalium Avium, Amphibiorum, Piscium, Insectorum, Vermium; quae in Itinere orientali observavit. Petrus Forskål. Post Mortem Auctoris editit Carsten Niebuhr. Adjuncta est materia Medica Kahirina. Heineck et Faber, Hauniae, pp. 19.Google Scholar
Gramentz, D. (1993) Beobachtungen und Untersuchungen zur Ethologie und Ökologie von Trionyx triunguis in West-Anatolien. Salamandra 29, 1643.Google Scholar
Gray, J.E. (1855) Catalogue of shield reptiles in the collection of the British Museum. Part 1. Testudinata (tortoises). London: British Museum.Google Scholar
Griffin, M. (2002) Annotated checklist and provisional conservation status of Namibian reptiles. Technical Reports of Scientific Services No. 1. Windhoek: Ministry of Environment and Tourism.Google Scholar
Gruvel, A. (1931) Les états de Syrie. Richesse marines et fluviales. Exploitation actuelle – avenir. Paris: Bibliothèque de la Faune des Colonies Françaises.Google Scholar
Haas, G. (1951) On the present state of our knowledge of the herpetofauna of Palestine. Bulletin of the Research Council of Israel 1, 6794.Google Scholar
Hathaway, R. (1972) Unanswered questions about sea turtles in Turkey. Balik ve Balikcilik 20, 18.Google Scholar
Ilani, G. (1983) Soft-shelled turtles. Israel—Land and Nature 8, 126127.Google Scholar
Ilani, G. and Shalmon, B. (1984) Soft-shelled turtles in the Crocodile River. Israel—Land and Nature 10, 36.Google Scholar
Iverson, J.B. (1992) A revised checklist with distribution maps of the turtles of the world. Richmond, Indiana: published by the author.Google Scholar
Kasparek, M. (1994) Die Nil-Weichschildkröte—eine stark bedrohte Reptilienart im Mittelmeergebiet. Herpetofauna 16, 813.Google Scholar
Kasparek, M. (2001) Towards an action plan for the conservation of the Nile soft-shelled turtle, Trionyx triunguis in the Mediterranean. Unpublished Report to Council of Europe, Bern Convention, commissioned by MEDASSET.Google Scholar
Kasparek, M. and Kinzelbach, R. (1991) Distribution and bionomics of the Nile soft-shelled turtle, Trionyx triunguis, in the Eastern Mediterranean. Berlin: Zeitschrift für Angewandte Zoologie (in print).Google Scholar
Kinzelbach, R. (1986) Recent records of the Nile soft-shelled turtle, Trionyx triunguis, and of the Euphrates soft-shelled turtle, Rafetus euphraticus, in the Middle East. Zoology in the Middle East 1, 8387.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lanza, B. and Sassi, A. (1966) Le Testuggini Terrestri e D'acqua Della Somalia (Reptilia, Testudinidae). Monitore Zoologico Italiano 74, Suppl. 257272.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Largen, M.J. (1997) An annotated checklist of the amphibians and reptiles of Eritrea, with keys for their identification. Tropical Zoology 10, 65115.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Loveridge, A. and Williams, E.E. (1957) Revision of the African tortoises and turtles of the suborder Cryptodira. Bulletin of the Museum of Comparative Zoology Harvard 115, 163557.Google Scholar
Nada, M. (2002) An assessment of the Nile soft-shelled turtle, Trionyx triunguis, in the Nile Delta and its lagoons, Egypt. Commissioned by The Mediterranean Association to Save the Sea Turtles (MEDASSET) and supported by the British Chelonian Group (BCG). Final Report, July 2002: 13 pp.Google Scholar
Oruc, A., Demirayak, F. and Sat, G. (1996). Fishery in the eastern Mediterranean and its impact on marine turtles: the conclusive report. Istanbul: DHKD-WWF.Google Scholar
Pritchard, P.C.H. (1979) Encyclopedia of turtles. Neptune, New Jersey: TFH Publications.Google Scholar
Sella, I. (1981) Sea turtles in the eastern Mediterranean and northern Red Sea. In Bjorndal, K.A. (ed.) Biology and conservation of sea turtles. Proceedings of the world conference on sea turtles conservation, Washington DC 26–30 November, 1979, pp. 417423.Google Scholar
Serruya, C. (1978) General background. In Serruya, C. (ed.) Lake Kinneret. The Hague-Boston-London: Dr W. Junk Publishers, pp. 123146.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Siebenrock, F. (1913) Schildkroten aus Syrien und Mesopotamien. Annalen Naturhist Museum 27, 171225.Google Scholar
Spawls, S., Howell, K., Drewes, R. and Ashe, J. (2002) A field guide to the reptiles of East Africa. London: Academic Press.Google Scholar
Taskavak, E. and Atatur, M.K. (1998) Habitats and distribution of the Euphrates soft-shelled turtle, Rafetus euphraticus (Daudin, 1802) in southeastern Anatolia; some observations on its biology and factors endangering its survival. Chelonian Conservation and Biology 3, 2030.Google Scholar
Taskavak, E., Reimann, M.J. and Polder, W.N. (1999) First record of Trionyx triunguis from Kos Island, Greece with comments on its occurrence in the eastern Mediterranean. Chelonian Conservation and Biology 3, 510512.Google Scholar
Van Der Winden, J., Bogaerts, S., Strijbosch, H. and Van Den Berck, V. (1994) The Nile soft-shelled turtle, Trionyx triunguis, in the Goksu delta, Turkey. Zoology in the Middle East 10, 5762.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Werner, Y.L. (1988) Herpetofaunal survey of Israel (1950–1985), with comments on Sinai and Jordan and on zoogeographical heterogeneity. In Yom-Tov, Y. and Tchernov, E. (eds.) The zoogeography of Israel. Dordrecht: Boston and Lancaster, pp. 355388.Google Scholar
Yom-Tov, Y. and Mendelssohn, H. (1988) Changes in the distribution and abundance of vertebrates in Israel during the 20th century. In Yom-Tov, Y. and Tchernov, E. (eds) The zoogeography of Israel. Dordrecht: Boston and Lancaster, pp. 515547.Google Scholar