Fig. 2. Basicranial length and greatest width of alveolar surface of upper jaw on 45 skulls of T. ferox. Some skulls (sex unknown) in which the basicranial length exceeds 85 mm. develop widened alveolar surfaces of the jaws.
Length of Claw
Secondary sexual differences in length of claw on the forelimb are pronounced in some kinds of turtles. Cahn (1937:178) stated that the female of Trionyx muticus usually has long claws on the hind feet, while the male has long claws on the forefeet, but I am unable to substantiate his statement. Measurements of length of the third claw on the hind limb taken in 41 males and 45 females of spinifer from Louisiana showed no secondary sexual difference.
Ontogenetic Variation
Pattern
In all species and subspecies the juvenal pattern is replaced in females as growth proceeds by a mottled and blotched pattern that is contrasting or of nearly uniform coloration. The blotched pattern (of lichenlike figures) is evident on the carapaces of most females that have plastra so long as 8.0 centimeters. The contrasting juvenal pattern on the dorsal surfaces of the soft parts of the body is correspondingly modified in females, but at a size larger than 8.0 centimeters. Size of ocelli (OD/PL) in T. s. spinifer and hartwegi seems to vary ontogenetically (see section on Geographic Variation).
Some hatchlings have blotched patterns (T. spinifer asper, TU 16689.2, plastral length, 3.5 cm.); the largest females examined that did not show any evidence of mottling were two asper having plastrons 7.6 and 8.0 centimeters in length. Variation in color and pattern probably is modified greatly by the environment (Heude in Stejneger, 1907:518, footnote d) and the physiological condition of the individual. Smith, Nixon and Minton (1949:92) reported that a female of T. s. hartwegi developed a striking melanistic pattern in captivity and they concluded that patterns of soft-shelled turtles may be produced not only by conventional chromatophores, but also by other depositions, both intra- and extracellular. TU 16170, taken from brackish water at Delacroix Island, St. Bernard Parish, Louisiana, is the only adult male I have seen that had a blotched pattern (orange-brown in life) on the carapace in addition to the juvenal pattern. One female of muticus, KU 48229, having a plastral length 14.5 centimeters, retained a well-defined juvenal pattern, and lacked a mottled and blotched pattern (see [Pl. 46]).
Tuberculation