- Irwin's Turtle
Taxobox | name = Irwin's Turtle
image_width = 240px
image_caption =
regnum =Animal ia
phylum =Chordata
classis =Reptilia
ordo =Testudines
familia =Chelidae
genus = "Elseya "
species = "E. irwini"
binomial = "Elseya irwini"
binomial_authority = Cann, 1997Irwin's Turtle, ("Elseya irwini"), is a species of
Australia nturtle . The female of the species has a pale head with a yellowish horny sheath on the crown. [http://www.jcu.edu.au/school/tbiol/zoology/herp/Elseyalatisternum.PDF#search=%22elseya%20irwini%22]
It was named after its 'co-discoverer', famedzoologist and TV personality,Steve Irwin . Steve Irwin's father,Bob Irwin , first caught the animal on a fishing line during a family camp trip in 1990. They never had seen it before. Steve Irwin took pictures and sent them to turtle-expert John Cann who verified that it was indeed a new species. This was only determined after Irwin's death.This species of turtle is unique in that it can breathe underwater by taking water into its
cloaca . A chamber withgill -like structures situated in the cloaca extracts oxygen; this enables the turtle to stay underwater for long periods without taking a breath.Possibility of extinction
The "Elseya irwini" is named as a species facing
extinction because of plans to build theUrunnah Dam in far northQueensland .The government of
Queensland has now backed away from the building proposal, saying “there are no current plans to build the Urannah Dam”. [ [http://crikeymatemosaic.wordpress.com/ The Steve Irwin Mosaic Tribute Project ] ]
The animal only lives in the Broken-Bowen River system and the lower Burdekin River, the area where the dam will be built.
Ecologist Dr Ivan Lawler, fromJames Cook University 's School of Earth and Environmental Sciences, states that there are around 4000 to 5000 examples left in the wild today. Researchers from the university have caught 82 turtles of which only five had been juveniles. This may indicate a threat to the future of the species; when the older generation dies, there may not be enough young to replace them.Another curious fact is that there were only 5 males among the 77 adults caught, making the "Elseya irwini" the most female-biased turtle population known.
References
* [http://www.news.com.au www.news.com.au] [ [http://www.news.com.au/story/0,23599,22340488-421,00.html Concern for Irwin's bum-breathing turtle | NEWS.com.au] ]
External links
* [http://www.deh.gov.au/cgi-bin/abrs/fauna/details.pl?pstrVol=REPTILIA;pstrTaxa=3312;pstrChecklistMode=1 Australian Faunal Directory]
* [http://www.carettochelys.com/elseya/images/e_irwini1.gifPicture of the head of the Elseya irwini]
* [http://www.carettochelys.com/elseya/images/e_irwini2.gifPicture of the shell of the Elseya irwini]
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