The pubic and ischiadic bones enclose a large heart-shaped foramen, and are free from the plastron; the ilia are attached only to the sacral ribs. The carapace is peculiar in so far as it is very incomplete peripherally, the ribs extending considerably beyond the costal plates, nor are they joined by marginal plates, which are absent, unless they are represented by a few small ossifications imbedded in the posterior marginal flap of the disc (Emyda of India). The rim of the disc is always formed by a horizontal, cutaneous, very flexible flap. All the dorsal plates have a rough upper surface, vermiculated or rugose, as usual with such dermal bones, which have lost most of or all their horny covering, and have sunk more deeply into the skin. The nuchal plate has usually a pair of rib-like processes. The neurals form a continuous series, except in the African Cyclanorbis, in which they are much reduced in size, and separated by the costal plates.
The plastron is imperfect, all its constituent nine elements being only loosely connected with each other, and there remains a wide median vacuity between the lateral elements. Most of these plastral bones are reduced to splints, which, instead of meeting by regular sutures, loosely interdigitate with their jagged edges. In the young all these ventral elements are deeply imbedded in the soft, leathery skin, and they do not at all resemble in appearance those of the dorsal side. With age they develop upon their ventral surface stronger and denser ossifications, which ultimately broaden out, sometimes beyond the original underlying bone, and assume the characteristic vermiculated surface-appearance. This is undoubtedly a process of exostosis, a step towards revival of that armour which had been much reduced ancestrally. To appreciate this condition, it is at least suggestive that these mud-tortoises, when kept in the usual hard-bottomed tanks, invariably become sore, the skin wearing through where the imbedded plastral bones touch the ground. Thus what is crammed into the short life of a captive individual, is in the natural course of events spread over many generations, whereby it has ceased to be pathological, and has become a comparatively new, tertiary, but regular feature.
It is not open to much doubt that the characteristic features of the Trionychoidea are not primitive but secondary. This is indicated by the whole structure and behaviour of the carapace and plastron. The softening of the whole shell, the loss of the horny shields, the reduction of the claws, are the direct and almost unavoidable results of life in muddy waters.
Geologically they do not seem to be very old. They appear, already referable to the genus Trionyx, in the Upper Cretaceous strata of North America. In the Lower and Middle Tertiary strata many species existed in North America and in Europe, and it is of great importance that in these species the costal plates were much broader, and the marginal plates better developed, than in the recent forms. Now their half-dozen genera, with about twenty-four species, are confined to North America, the tropical and warmer parts of Asia, and the Malay Islands, and to Africa from the Nile to the Senegal and to the Congo.
The habits of Trionychoidea have found few observers. According to L. Agassiz,[[138]] they live in the muddy bottom of shallow waters, burying themselves in the soft mud, with only the head, or a small part of it, exposed. They breathe without moving the body, by raising up the long neck and carrying the leathery snout above water. When moving through the water they strike horizontally with both pairs of limbs, alternating, however, the right and left; but when they start suddenly, the front limbs are seen moving together towards the tip of the snout, and then striking simultaneously backward with great power. As the shield does not project forward, the fore-limbs usually move beyond the shield, and as its outer edge is sharp, and the feet are broad, their webs reach above as well as below the plane of that edge, so that the water is driven partly over and partly under it. When they move along the bottom, the limbs still move horizontally, the webs striking against the water, and the inner toes, those with the claws, against the bottom. They also bury themselves horizontally, becoming covered by only a thin layer of mud. They readily resort to the shell for protection. The neck and head are withdrawn entirely, the loose skin rolling off from the greater part of the neck; and the skin of the legs also slips off, as far as the elbows and knees. In confinement they exhibit great quickness; their movements are abrupt and unsteady, except when they swim rapidly in one direction. They then dart their long and slender neck quickly forwards or sideways and upwards, as snakes do, and bite in the same way, striking suddenly. Their temper is bad or even ferocious, and large specimens are quite dangerous.
Their food consists of all sorts of aquatic animals, fish, frogs, and molluscs, for instance Anodonta and Paludina. According to the different diet, many species develop a peculiar kind of dimorphism, a reasonable explanation of which has been given by Boulenger. In the young the horny coverings of the jaws are sharp, with cutting edges, and in those specimens which keep to a diet of fish and other soft creatures, the jaws remain in the same condition. But in those which take to living upon molluscs, the hard shells of which they have to crush, the horny edges are worn down; and broad, thick, horny, crushing pads are developed in their stead, the supporting parts of the jaws becoming more massive. The masticatory muscles are likewise enlarged, and a tubercle grows upon the lower border of the jugal bone, whence arises part of the masseter muscle.
The eggs are round, thick-shelled, but very brittle; they are laid in the sand above the level of the water, and this is the chief occasion on which these tortoises creep on land.
Trionyx.–The plastron has no special cutaneous valves for the concealment of the hind-limbs. This is the principal genus, with the greatest number of species and the widest distribution, the latter coinciding with that of the whole family. The upper surface of the shell of young specimens frequently forms numerous longitudinal ridges or series of little horny tubercles which disappear with age.
T. ferox, the commonest "Soft-shelled Turtle" of the United States. Olive above with scattered, small, round, black spots; young with conical, spine-like tubercles, especially on the nuchal border and on the posterior portion of the shell, which has a pale, black-edged border. A light, black-edged streak passes through the eye and joins its fellow on the snout. The limbs are olive brown, spotted and marbled with black. The under parts of the shell are white. Very large specimens have a shell 18 inches in length and 16 inches wide. Holbrook gives the following account of its habits:–
"A voracious, carnivorous creature. They reside most constantly in the water, swim with rapidity, and choose for their retreat holes under the banks of rivers, or under rocks; and not unfrequently the trunk of some huge forest tree, fallen into the stream, affords them shelter. Sometimes they leave the water and conceal themselves in the mud: I have frequently seen them thus buried to the depth of 2 or 3 inches, leaving only a small breathing hole for the long neck and narrow head, which is occasionally thrust out, but most commonly it is retracted so that one would pass near without observing their habitation; and if seen, it might easily be mistaken for the residence of some large insect. At other times they may be seen in numbers on rocks in shallow water, basking in the sun, apparently asleep. They bite severely when provoked, darting forward with great velocity the long neck and head, and not unfrequently spring upward at the same time and make a loud hiss.