This species is common in the eastern half of North America, from Canada to Texas. It is mainly aquatic, and is one of the dullest and shyest species. My own specimens spend most of their time in the water, invariably in the darkest corners, preferably under a stone or a log, and they do not leave their hiding places until dark, in search of worms, meat, and all sorts of animal food. For months I could never induce them to take food from a stick, or even to eat in my presence, and it was not until after many weeks that one of them at last protruded its head far enough to exhibit the yellow stripes. When taken out of the water they draw in their heads, just allowing the vicious little eyes to be visible, and opening the sharp-edged mouth widely to bite deliberately and furiously at the unwary finger. Some spent the winter in the water, in the greenhouses, feeding as usual, others crept on land, hiding under moss, half buried in the soil, where they slept for several months, but with interruptions in order to soak and to drink. When spring is well advanced they prefer the water for their regular sojourn. Some which had been sent over from New York arrived in a deplorably dried-up condition, the skin being quite flabby and shrivelled, but after a few hours' soaking they came round, and increased considerably in weight, the limbs and neck becoming turgid.
C. pennsylvanicum of Eastern North America has a larger, more oval plastron. The head is not so strikingly large as in the other species and, like the neck, is brown with yellowish spots, and often has streaks on the sides. The tail of the male ends in a nail-like horny point. The lobes of the plastron are well hinged in the adult.
C. leucostomum of Central America is larger, with a shell-length of six inches. The plastron is not at all cruciform, but has a broad bridge, and fills the box, moreover it has an anterior and a posterior hinge, so that the box can be completely closed. Hence the vernacular name of the Box-Terrapin.
Fam. 4. Platysternidae, represented by the single species Platysternum megacephalum in Burma, Siam, and Southern China.
The pectoral shields are widely separated from the marginals by inframarginals, the plastron is large, oblong, not cruciform, and the tail is long.
The plastron consists of nine plates, and is covered with six pairs of shields, the most anterior of which are the broad gulars. The nuchal plate has no rib-like processes. The neurals form a continuous series, and there are twenty-three marginal scutes. The temporal fossae are completely roofed over, owing to the long sutures formed by the parietals with the postfrontals, moreover the postfrontals expand laterally so much that they posteriorly come into broad contact with the quadrato-jugals and squamosals, anteriorly with the maxillaries, so that the jugals are completely surrounded by bones, and are shut off from the orbits and from the temporal fossae. This is a unique arrangement, found nowhere else in Tortoises. The pubic and ischiadic symphyses are connected with each other by ligaments only.
The general appearance of this water-tortoise is rather curious, since the carapace is much depressed, looking, especially in younger specimens, as if it had been crushed in. The head, provided with very strong hooked jaws, is strikingly heavy and large, and is covered above with one single large shield. The tail is longer than the shell, which, in full-grown specimens, reaches about six inches in length; it is, throughout its length, covered with rings of squarish shields. A large specimen measures 14 inches in total length, of which only five fall to the shell.
Fam. 5. Testudinidae.–The shell is always covered with well-developed horny shields. Those which form the plastral bridge are in direct contact with the marginals. The plastron is composed of nine bones. The digits have four or five claws. The neck is completely retractile. The skull is devoid of parieto-squamosal arches.
This large family is cosmopolitan, with the exception of the Australian and the adjoining Austro-Malayan countries. It contains genera which form a continuous gradation between absolutely terrestrial and thoroughly aquatic tortoises; and many are truly amphibious. As a general rule the typically terrestrial kinds have a more curved or arched shell, the digits are short, the eggs are more oval or round, and they are chiefly herbivorous; the essentially aquatic kinds have a flatter or depressed shell, webbed feet, with longer, often slender claws, the eggs are more cylindrical, and they live on animal diet. About 20 genera, with more than 110 species, are recognised by Boulenger, but their essential characters are nearly all internal, and therefore of no avail for the determination of live or entire specimens.
Chrysemys.–One of the most typical and widely distributed genera of American Terrapins or water-tortoises. The carapace is flat; the plastron is quite immovable, with a strongly developed bridge. Feet well webbed. Tail short. Skull with a broad, complete, lateral, temporal arch. About one dozen species, mostly in the eastern half of the United States, but the whole genus ranges from Canada to Argentina.