Ch. longicollis reaches a shell-length of ten inches. It inhabits Southern Australia. The illustrations make a detailed description unnecessary. The colour of the dorsal shield is uniformly dark rich brown, while the shields of the under surface are yellow, with broad dark brown lines along the sutures. These "long-necked Chelodines" have a striking appearance, when they swim or creep about, with the neck either stretched out straight or bent horizontally in an S-shape. The whole creature looks neat and elegant; the iris is pale yellow, and gives the eye a very intelligent expression. They keep well in captivity, provided they are given the choice of land and water. My own prefer to spend most of the day on land, preferably under the ledge of a stone, or perched upon the stone itself if the latter is in the shade, and not too much exposed to view. There they lie motionless, with the neck neatly tucked under the shell, either to the right or to the left. Although the eyelids may be closed, they can see well enough, owing to the transparent condition of the lower lid. They feed in the water upon soft animals, as for instance worms, smooth caterpillars, cockroaches or little frogs; and they also take meat readily, provided this is moved about. The food is invariably taken with a quick sideward jerk of the neck and head.
Fig. 90.–Chelodina longicollis (Australian long-necked Chelodines). × ¼.
My specimens soon became so tame that they left the water, and ran up to me with the necks stretched to their full length, then snatching the bit of food, and retiring into the pond to swallow it. When left to themselves they are rather nocturnal in their feeding habits. Now and then they tuck themselves away for weeks without feeding, for instance when they go through a regular term of aestivation in the summer. The last winter they spent buried in the moss, but occasionally, especially on bright and sunny days, they went into the water for a few hours, chiefly to drink, but sometimes also to take a little food.
Hydromedusa, a South American genus, has a neck even longer than that of Chelodina, which it much resembles externally. But the nuchal shield, large and broad transversely, is situated behind the anterior marginals, looking therefore like a sixth neural shield. The neural plates form a continuous row, only the last pair of costal plates meeting in the middle line. H. tectifera occurs in Southern Brazil, and in the La Plata. The shell is dark brown above; yellowish, with dark spots, below; the head and neck are olive-coloured, adorned with a broad white, black-edged band on either side. Fore- and hind-limbs broadly webbed, and with four claws. Total length of the shell about eight inches.
Fam. 3. Carettochelydidae.–The shell is covered with soft skin instead of horny shields. The limbs are transformed into paddles, with elongated digits, and have only two claws. The neck is short, and not retractile. In other respects the skeleton, notably the plastron, pelvis, and skull, conform with the Pleurodirous type. Only one species, Carettochelys insculpta, still imperfectly known, from the Fly River, New Guinea. Length of the shell of the only complete specimen about 18 inches. This peculiar creature seems to stand in the same relation to the typical Pleurodira, as do the Chelonidae to the Testudinidae, except for the complete reduction of the horny shields upon the shell, recalling in this respect Sphargis and Trionyx.
Sub-Order 3. Trionychoidea.–The shell is very flat, oval, or almost round, and is covered with soft, leathery skin instead of with horny shields. The limbs are broadly webbed, and only the three inner digits are provided with claws. Carnivorous, found in the rivers of Asia, Africa, and North America.
The head and neck are completely retractile, bending by a sigmoid curve in a vertical plane like that of the Cryptodira. The jaws are concealed by soft, lip-like flaps, and the nose forms a soft short proboscis. The ear is hidden. The skull, Fig. 91, is flat, with three long posterior processes, formed by the supra-occipital above, and the squamosals on either side. The whole temporal region forms a wide, shallow fossa, without any indication of being arched or bridged over. The premaxilla is extremely small, unpaired, not even reaching the nasal cavity or the vomer. The maxillaries are correspondingly enlarged, surrounding the choanae, which are separated by the narrow vomer. The palatines form a median suture, and are joined behind by the long basisphenoid, which separates the long pterygoids from each other. The quadrate is trumpet-shaped, with a posterior notch for the stapes. The zygomatic arch is complete, and is formed by the quadrato-jugal and the jugal; the latter joins the maxillary and postfrontal, mostly reaching the orbit; in some cases it also just meets the parietal, thereby adding to the strength of the postorbital arch. The prefrontals are large; nasals are absent. The mandible is remarkable for the great development of the coronoid process.
Fig. 91.–Skull of Trionyx hurum. A, From above; B, from the left side; Cond, occipital condyle; Fr, frontal; J, Jug, jugal; L.o, lateral occipital; Max, maxillary; Op.o, opisthotic; Par, parietal; Pr.f, prefrontal; Pro, prootic; Pt.f, postfrontal; Q, quadrate; Qj, quadrato-jugal; S.o, supra-occipital; Sq, squamosal.