The following ratios were developed from the measurements. Reference to these ratios will be made by the abbreviations within the parentheses: length of carapace/length of plastron (CL/PL); length of carapace/width of carapace (CL/CW); length of carapace/plane of width of carapace (CL/PCW); length of plastron/width of head (PL/HW); width of head/length of snout (HW/SL); diameter of ocellus/length of plastron (OD/PL).
Secondary Sexual Variation
Size
In many species of turtles, females are larger than males; the difference in size between the sexes is probably most pronounced in aquatic emydids. The ten largest individuals of each sex were selected to indicate the relative difference in size between the sexes of the three American species of Trionyx (excluding ater, [Table 2]). Female soft-shelled turtles attain a larger size than males. T. ferox is the largest species; muticus is the smallest. The approximate maximal size of each sex and the difference in size between the sexes are more correctly expressed for spinifer and muticus than for ferox, because fewer specimens of ferox were examined; presumably the approximate maximal size of males and females of ferox is larger than is indicated in [Table 2].
Table 2. Secondary Sexual Difference in Maximal Size of North American Species of the Genus Trionyx (excluding ater) Based on the Ten Largest Specimens of Each Sex of Each Species. The Extremes Precede the Mean (in parentheses).
| Species | Plastral length (cm.) | |
| ferox | males | 17.0-26.0 (20.0) |
| females | 23.3-34.0 (27.9) | |
| spinifer | males | 13.8-16.0 (14.4) |
| females | 26.0-31.0 (28.0) | |
| muticus | males | 11.8-14.0 (12.3) |
| females | 17.7-21.5 (18.9) | |
Pattern
Secondary sexual differences in pattern are probably more pronounced in soft-shelled turtles than in other species of turtles, except perhaps for the well-known melanism and concomitant obliteration of pattern acquired by some adult males of the scripta section of the genus Pseudemys.
The difference in pattern between the sexes of American species varies with size of the individual and with the species and subspecies. The juvenal pattern of some individuals of T. spinifer asper differs according to sex. In the other species and subspecies, there are no secondary sexual differences in the juvenal pattern. That pattern in females of all species and subspecies is partly or entirely obscured by a mottled and blotched pattern as growth proceeds. This mottled and blotched pattern is present on females not yet sexually mature, and is of contrasting lichenlike figures, and in other individuals is less contrasting and a more uniform coloration. The largest males of T. spinifer retain a conspicuous juvenal pattern; in those of muticus the pattern may be well-defined or partly modified and obscured, whereas in large males of ferox the juvenal pattern is ill-defined or absent. No male normally acquires a contrasting mottled and blotched pattern on the carapace. The pattern on the carapace of many large individuals of ferox is not distinctive as to sex.