We divide the recent Pleurodira into three families, of which that of Carettochelys stands apart by its paddle-shaped limbs and the absence of horny shields. The Pelomedusidae and Chelydidae are closely allied. The former are not Australian, and are externally distinguished by the absence of a nuchal shield.
Fam. 1. Pelomedusidae.–Neck completely retractile within the shell. Carapace without a nuchal shield. The plastron is composed of eleven plates, there being besides the unpaired endo-plastron a pair of meso-plastra, situated between the hyo- and hypo-plastra; but these meso-plastra meet in the middle line in Sternothaerus only, while in Podocnemis and Pelomedusa they are restricted to small pieces on the bridge, widely separated from each other by the usual hyo- and hypo-plastral suture. A nuchal shield is absent; there are twenty-four marginal and thirteen plastral shields, inclusive of the conspicuous intergular. The temporal fossa is widely open, except in Podocnemis, where it is partly roofed in by the meeting of the much-expanded quadrato-jugal with the parietal. The palatine bones are in median contact, not separated by the vomer. Nasal bones being absent, the large prefrontals meet in the middle line. The second cervical vertebra is biconvex.
This family is now represented by only three genera, with about fifteen species in Africa, Madagascar, and South America.
Sternothaerus.–Skull without a bony supratemporal roof. Meso-plastra large, extending right across the plastron. Anterior lobe of the plastron movable, the hinge passing between the hyo- and meso-plastral plates, and between the pectoral and abdominal shields. Fore- and hind-limbs with five short digits and claws. Several species in tropical and southern Africa, and in Madagascar. S. derbianus in West Africa, from the Gambia to Angola, is the largest species, with a shell nearly one foot in length.
Pelomedusa.–Skull with a slender parieto-squamosal arch. Meso-plastra small and lateral. Plastron without a hinge. Fore- and hind-limbs with five very short digits and five claws. Top of the head with one pair of shields between the eyes, and with a large interparietal and a pair of parietals behind.
P. galeata, the only species, occurs in Madagascar and nearly the whole of Africa south of the Sahara, from the Cape to Abyssinia, and in the Sinaitic peninsula. The shell, less than one foot in length, is much depressed and is obtusely keeled; brown above with black spots; brownish-yellow below. The short and broad head is coloured like the rest, without ornamentation. In Somaliland this species sleeps hidden on land during the dry seasons, from July to the end of September, and from January to March, and appears at once after the rains have set in.
Podocnemis.–With a supratemporal roof formed by the junction of the parietal with the quadrato-jugal. Meso-plastra small and lateral. Fore- and hind-limbs broadly webbed, with five and four claws respectively. The fore-arms and the outer edges of the hind-feet with several conspicuous shields, hence the generic name. Head with an interparietal, two parietals, and a narrow unpaired shield between the eyes. The tail is very short. The carapace is flat and broad, strongly serrated on the posterior margin. Chin with one or two short barbels. Several species in South America, chiefly in the basin of the Amazon, and one in Madagascar.
P. expansa.–Very common in Tropical South America, east of the Andes. The female, which is much larger than the male, has a shell nearly three feet in length. Olive-brown above with darker patches; yellowish below. With a few yellow spots above and behind the eyes, and on the parietal region. The "Arrau" turtle is of great commercial importance on account of the eggs, which are periodically collected in enormous quantities, chiefly for the oil. This is either eaten, like the eggs themselves, or used for burning in lamps, or as an addition to tar. The turtles are likewise eaten by man and beast. Thousands of the little creatures are snapped up by Jabiru storks, alligators, and fishes; the adults fall an easy prey to the prowling jaguar, which turns them over on to their backs and neatly cleans out the flesh with its sharp and powerful claws.
Fertilisation takes place in the water, the eggs are deposited on land, in sand-banks, the female digging a hole about two feet deep and covering up the numerous soft-shelled eggs with sand. The time of deposition is the early hours of the morning, but the season depends upon the beginning of the principal rains, since the young are hatched shortly before the torrential rains. This season differs considerably in the various countries. The hatching takes about forty days; the eggs are consequently laid in the Amazon countries during the months of September to November, in the Orinoco district in March. This species lives in the pools of the inundated forests, and when these are dried up, the animals retire into the rivers themselves. Their food consists mainly of the fruit dropping down from the trees.
Bates, in his delightful book, The Naturalist on the River Amazon, gives the following lively and exhaustive account of his experience with these turtles:–