Painted Turtle

Description 4 - 9 7/8" .Carapace olive or black; oval, smooth, flattened, and unkeeled; scute seems bordered with olive,yellow or red, Red bars or crescents on marginal scutes. Plastron yellow, unpatterned or intricately marked. Yellow and red stripes on neck, legs,and tail. Notched upper jaw.

Subspecies

Eastern Vertebral and coastal scute seams aligned, plastron yellow, not patterned; se.Canada through New England and the Atlantic coastal states to n.Georgia and e. Alabama. Midlands, vertebral and coastal scutes not aligned, plastron yellow with dark blotch in center; s.Quebec and s.Ontario to Tennessee.
Southern Red or yellow stripes down carapace,plastron yellow, not patterned; s Illinois to Gulf, se.Oklahoma to c.Alabama.
Western Largest ssp., with light netlike lines on carapace, bars on marginals, and intricate branching pattern on plastron;sw Ontario south to Missouri and west to Oregon and British Columbia, isolated populations in the Southwest, Specimens from areas where ranges of subspecies overlap display an intergration of characteristics. The most widespread turtle in North America. It is fond of basking and often dozens can be observed on a single log. Young turtles are basically carnivorous, but become herbivorous as the mature
Breeding Nests May to July. In North lays 1-2 clutches a year, in south 2-4, of 2-20 elliptical eggs, 1 2/4" long. flask-shaped nest cavity is 4" deep. Hatchlings in north may overwinter in the nest. Incubation averages 10-11 weeks. Males reach maturity in 2-5 years; females in 4-8
Habitat Slow-moving shallows streams, rivers, and lakes. likes soft bottoms with vegetation and half-submerged logs.
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