Skip to search formSkip to main contentSkip to account menu

Steindachnerina insculpta

Known as: Cruxentina insculpta 
National Institutes of Health

Papers overview

Semantic Scholar uses AI to extract papers important to this topic.
2017
2017
University of Minnesota M.S. thesis.August 2017. Major: Integrated Biosciences. Advisor: Ron Moen. 1 computer file (PDF); vii, 63… 
2015
2015
The previous published record for oldest male and female G. insculpta in the wild was 42 and 46 years old, respectively. Both… 
2010
2010
ABSTRACT An adult male Fly River turtle, Carretochelys insculpta, presented with dull mentation and a proptosed right eye due to… 
Review
2006
Review
2006
................................................................................................................................................iii ACKNOWLEDGMENTS ............................................................................................................................iv TABLE OF CONTENTS .............................................................................................................................vi LIST OF FIGURES...................................................................................................................................viii LIST OF TABLES ......................................................................................................................................xi CHAPTER 1 ................................................................................................................................................12 INTRODUCTION AND LITERATURE REVIEW...............................................................................................12 CHAPTER 2: ...............................................................................................................................................24 STUDY AREA.............................................................................................................................................24 CHAPTER 3: ...............................................................................................................................................31 METHODS AND MATERIALS ......................................................................................................................31 CHAPTER 4: ...............................................................................................................................................43 POPULATION EVALUATION AND MORPHOMETRICS..................................................................................43 CHAPTER 5 ................................................................................................................................................71 CAPTURE INFORMATION AND TRAPPING SUCCESS .................................................................................71 CHAPTER 6 ................................................................................................................................................94 HOME RANGE, SEASONAL MOVEMENTS AND HABITAT USE ...................................................................94 CHAPTER 7 ..............................................................................................................................................151 THERMAL ECOLOGY OF CLEMMYS AND GLYPTEMYS IN WEST VIRGINIA ..............................................151 CHAPTER 8 ..............................................................................................................................................193 ABNORMALITIES, INJURIES, ILLNESSES AND ECTOPARASITES..............................................................193 CHAPTER 9 ..............................................................................................................................................218 BEHAVIORAL NOTES...............................................................................................................................218 CHAPTER 10 ............................................................................................................................................226 MANAGEMENT IMPLICATIONS AND FUTURE RESEARCH ........................................................................226 LITERATURE CITED...............................................................................................................................228 APPENDIX I ..............................................................................................................................................235 VEGETATION OBSERVED AT THESIS SITE..............................................................................................235 APPENDIX II .............................................................................................................................................238 INCIDENTAL WILDLIFE SPECIES OBSERVED AT THESIS SITE ................................................................238 
2004
2004
Understanding temperature-dependent sex determination in nature often depends on knowledge of species-specific attributes that…