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  2. List of reptiles of Kansas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_reptiles_of_Kansas

    Kansas is home to 15 species of turtles. [1]Family Chelydridae – snapping turtles Alligator snapping turtle; Common snapping turtle; Family Kinosternidae – mud and musk turtles

  3. Alligator snapping turtle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alligator_snapping_turtle

    Though not verified, a 183 kg (403 lb) alligator snapping turtle was found in Kansas in 1937, [14] but the largest verifiable one is debatable. One weighed at the Shedd Aquarium in Chicago was a 16-year resident giant alligator snapper weighing 113 kg (249 lb), sent to the Tennessee Aquarium as part of a breeding loan in 1999, where it ...

  4. Northern map turtle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Northern_map_turtle

    Northern map turtles inhabit an area from south Quebec and Ontario to northern Vermont where it lives in the St. Lawrence River drainage basin.Its range extends west through the Great Lakes and into southern Wisconsin and eastern Minnesota, west of the Appalachians, south to Kansas and northwestern Georgia.

  5. Rare turtle hatches at zoo after no sightings in wild for ...

    www.aol.com/rare-turtle-hatches-zoo-no-153306901...

    A rare species of turtle which is extinct in the wild has hatched at a zoo in Kansas. The McCord’s box turtle was born at Sedgwick County Zoo, staff announced last Friday (13 October). “This ...

  6. Ornate box turtle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ornate_box_turtle

    The ornate box turtle is a relatively small turtle, measuring just 4-6″ (10-15 cm) when full-grown. Males and females generally look alike but males are often smaller; there is color variation with yellow lines from the center of the shell to the edges through gray, red-brown, or black coloration. [7]

  7. Common snapping turtle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_snapping_turtle

    In water, it is likely to flee and hide underwater in sediment. The common snapping turtle has a life-history strategy characterized by high and variable mortality of embryos and hatchlings, delayed sexual maturity, extended adult longevity, and iteroparity (repeated reproductive events) with low reproductive success per reproductive event. [5]

  8. Trionychidae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trionychidae

    Trionychidae is a family of turtles, commonly known as softshell turtles or simply softshells.The family was described by Leopold Fitzinger in 1826. Softshells include some of the world's largest freshwater turtles, though many can adapt to living in highly brackish waters.

  9. Aquatic turtles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aquatic_turtles

    Aquatic turtles may refer to: Red-eared slider---- Trachemys scripta elegans. Pond slider---- Trachemys scripta. Northern map turtle---- Graptemys geographica.