Amboina box turtle
The Amboina box turtle or Southeast Asian box turtle is a species of Asian box turtle widely distributed across Southeast Asia. It is native to the Asian mainland from northeast India, through Bangladesh, Burma and Thailand, across Laos, Cambodia, Vietnam, and Malaysia. It is also found on the archipelagos of Indonesia and the Philippines.
The type locality is "Amboine" Island, today Ambon Island in Indonesia.
Description
These turtles have blackish-brown to olive-brown shells that are not as ornate as many other box turtles. All have a blackish olive head with three yellow stripes on the side. They are relatively small turtles, ranging in length between 200-250mm depending on subspecies and sex. Females are slightly larger than males. The male can be identified by the slightly concave shape to its plastron. There is no specific pattern to what the underbellies may look like, for either sex. Life expectancy is 25–30 years. The only true way of telling age is to guess by the texture of the shell, as growth rings form irregularly.Distribution and habitat
The Amboina box turtle is widely distributed across Southeast Asia. Its range extends on the Asian mainland from northeast India, through Bangladesh, Burma and Thailand, across Laos, Cambodia, Vietnam, and Malaysia. It is also found on the archipelagos of Indonesia and the Philippines. The Amboina prefers lowland freshwater habitats from sea level up to about 500 meters and can be found in both natural and human-modified landscapes. It prefers still or slow-moving waters with a soft bottom including ponds, creeks, marshes, rice paddies, irrigation canals and drainage ditches. They are semi-aquatic and tend to spend more time on land at night; the young are more aquatic than adults. Amboina turtles do not migrate but individuals may wander substantial distances during their lifetime.Ecology and behavior
The Amboina is omnivorous but tends toward a more vegetarian diet. On land it eats plants, fruits, seeds, fungi and worms; in the water it consumes plants, insects and mollusks. The species has been observed to contribute to seed dispersal for fig trees and other tropical plants.Mating takes place between November and April after a brief courtship ritual. Typically, the female will lay three small clutches of two eggs each year and incubation may take anywhere from 70 to 100 days. Eggs are elongate, brittle and hard-shelled. The variability in clutch size, egg size and egg-laying season relate to geographic variability and climate.
Taxonomy
There are four subspecies that are primarily differentiated by differences in the color and shape of the carapace:Cuora amboinensis amboinensis – eastern Indonesian islands: Ambon Island, Sulawesi, the Moluccas, Buru, Seram, and East Timor, and other small islands in the region.Cuora amboinensis couro – south Indonesian islands: Sumatra, Java, Bali and Sumbawa.Cuora amboinensis kamaroma Rummler & Fritz, 1991 Mainland Indochina, Thailand, Singapore and mainland Malaysia and Borneo.Cuora amboinensis lineata McCord & Philippen, 1998 – Myanmar.Several distinct populations are believed to represent up to four more subspecies, or at least striking varieties.
- the Nicobar Islands
- East India, Bangladesh, and possibly Sri Lanka
- Borneo, the Malaysian islands, Brunei, and Palawan
- the Philippines