Rafetus

Genus of turtles From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Rafetus is a genus of highly endangered softshell turtles in the family Trionychidae. It is a genus of large turtles which are found in freshwater habitats in Eurasia.

Phylum:Chordata
Class:Reptilia
Suborder:Cryptodira
Quick facts Scientific classification, Type species ...
Rafetus
Temporal range: 17.5–0 Ma [1]
Rafetus swinhoei in Hanoi, Vietnam
Rafetus euphraticus
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Reptilia
Order: Testudines
Suborder: Cryptodira
Family: Trionychidae
Subfamily: Trionychinae
Genus: Rafetus
Gray, 1864
Type species
Testudo euphratica
Daudin, 1801
Species
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Taxonomy

Skulls of †R. bohemicus (A-B), R. swinhoei (C-D), R. euphraticus (E-F)

Evolution

Phylogenetic evidence largely suggests that Rafetus is most closely related to the widespread North American genus Apalone. The two genera appear to have diverged during the Late Eocene, likely when the ancestors of Apalone dispersed into North America via Beringia.[2][3]

Species

According to most taxonomists, the genus Rafetus contains the following two extant species.

A possible third species, Rafetus leloii Hà, 2000 (synonym R. vietnamensis Le et al., 2010), known commonly as the Hoan Kiem turtle, has been proposed as a species. It is considered a junior synonym of Rafetus swinhoei by most authorities,[6] but some Vietnamese scientists insist the two forms are not identical. The last known individual at Hoan Kiem Lake was found dead on 19 January 2016.[7][8]

An extinct species R. bohemicus Liebus, 1930 from the Burdigalian age of the Early Miocene (about 17.5 million years ago) lived in what is today the Czech Republic.[1]

Cladogram as drawn by Walter G. Joyce, Ariel Revan, Tyler R. Lyson, and Igor G. Danilov (2009)[9]

Trionychidae

References

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