Vietnamese Pond Turtle (species: Mauremys annamensis) in Laos Wildlife (Gaia Guide)
Mauremys annamensis
Vietnamese Pond Turtle
Kingdom Animalia
Phylum Chordata
Class Reptilia
Order Testudines
Family Geoemydidae
Genus Mauremys
Species Mauremys annamensis
Status critically endangered

Distinguishing features

It can be distinguished from its relatives by its color pattern: the head is dark with three or four yellow stripes down the side. The plastron (belly shield) is firmly attached, yellow or orange, with a large black blotch in the middle of each scute. (Wikipedia)

Size

  • Up to 29 cm (Carapace length)

Synonyms

Distribution and habitat preferences

It is endemic to a small area in central Vietnam, it was reportedly abundant in the 1930s, but all field surveys after 1941 had failed to locate any individuals in the wild. As it was occasionally seen traded as food, it was not yet extinct in the wild however.

In 2006, a wild population of M. annamensis was found near Hội An in Quảng Nam Province. Despite its rarity, specimens have been observed for sale in China and Hong Kong, and have been illicitly imported into the USA. A small number are being captive-bred on Hainan Island in southern China, as well as at the Cuc Phuong Turtle Conservation Center located in Cuc Phuong National Park in northern Vietnam. The species is nonetheless close to extinction in the wild, as illegal hunting seems to continue. (Wikipedia)

Diet

They eat insects, worms and aquatic vegetation.

Web resources