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The aptly-name red-eared slider is an easily recognizable semiaquatic turtle that's popular in the global pet trade. The...
20/02/2023

The aptly-name red-eared slider is an easily recognizable semiaquatic turtle that's popular in the global pet trade. These animals are considered one of the top invasive species of the world, and it's really no wonder when you consider their mating habits.

Red-eared sliders (Trachemys scripta elegans), which have a red stripe around their ears and are known to quickly "slide" off objects into the water, are native to the southern United States and northern Mexico. But thanks to the global pet trade industry, they're the most widespread turtle species, having been introduced to dozens of countries, said Greg Pauly, a herpetologist at the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County.

Though the reptiles are desired as pets for their initial small size and low maintenance, some pet owners face a rude awakening: The turtles get bigger. "The turtle may have only required a 2-gallon tank when you bought it, but after a few years it needs a 100-gallon tank or a backyard pond," Pauly told Live Science. "They're also kind of messy and kind of stinky. So, after a few years [of growth], they become a big commitment." [In Photos: The World's Freakiest Looking Animals]

Some owners take the easy way out by releasing their red-eared sliders into the wild, helping the turtles spread to the urban ponds, streams and reservoirs of every continent save for Antarctica.

In these habitats, male red-eared sliders will engage in courtship behaviors as long as it's warm enough for them to swim around. "They are pretty single-minded in focus," Pauly said, adding that the age at which the animals begin mating depends on their location. In the warmest of climates, males may reach sexual maturity at 2 year old and females 3 to 4 years old; the animals become sexually active a few years later when in colder climates.

Compared with females, male red-eared sliders have extra-long claws on their forefeet. But rather than use these claws as weapons, "Nightmare on Elm Street" style, males use their claws more like jazz hands to woo females.

When a male finds a female, he will swim up close to her, bring his forelimbs forward, and wave or rapidly vibrate his claws in front of her face. He may also use his claws to "tickle" the female's face, Pauly said.

If the female is uninterested, she'll try to avoid the male and swim around him or past him. But often, she won't get very far without running into another male. "The females are harassed constantly by all these males that are courting them," Pauly said.

Sometimes, the female will decide she's had enough and will pull her head down into her shell. But males, especially the older ones, don't always take "no" for an answer and may bite at the large fold of skin around the female's skin that's still sticking out, possibly wounding her.

It's not clear how females choose mates, if they have any choice at all.

But if the female is receptive, she'll allow the male to climb onto her back while the pair are still in the water. The male will use his forelimbs to hold onto her shell and his backlimbs to brace himself as his tries to position his cloaca (waste and reproductive or***ce) as close to hers as possible.

Male red-eared sliders, like other turtles, have a large p***s to body size ratio. During mating, the cloaca everts and engorges through hydrostatic pressure to become a p***s that's 30 to 40 percent of the length of the turtle's body. Unlike the mammalian p***s, which has a tube to transfer s***m, the turtle's p***s has a channel-like groove that the s***m moves down.

Much of the male's exceedingly long p***s goes into the female during copulation, which lasts up to 15 minutes.

After mating, females may store the male's s***m for an extended period of time before deciding to use it to fertilize her eggs. In fact, she could mate again and use the s***m of multiple males for a single clutch.

"For turtles, red-eared sliders are surprisingly prolific," Pauly said. That is, a female will lay up to 30 eggs in a terrestrial nest. And if the conditions are right, she may lay up to five or six clutches in a single year.

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20/02/2023

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This Big-Eyed, Deep-Sea Shark Looks Like an Anime Character
By Kimberly Hickok published July 18, 2018
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Genie's dogfish
Genie's dogfish, Squalus clarkae, is a newly identified species of shark named for marine biology pioneer Eugenie Clark. (Image credit: MarAlliance)
Florida scientists have just discovered an adorable, big-eyed species of dogfish shark, and the little creature looks like a mash-up of an alien and an anime character.

The newly identified species, Squalus clarkae, or Genie's dogfish, is named after the marine biology pioneer Eugenie Clark. It slinks around in the deep waters of the Gulf of Mexico and the western Atlantic Ocean. The sharks' monster peepers may look alarming, but these animals are relatively small, typically spanning no more than about an arm's length, from 20 to 28 inches long (50 to 70 centimeters).

The new species was previously categorized as Squalus mitsukurii, a dogfish species native to Japan. However, genetic tests and detailed analysis of the creature's physical features revealed that S. clarkae is distinct from its Japanese relative. [Images: Weird Deep-Sea Sharks]

Clark passed away in 2015 at age 92. Popularly known as "the Shark Lady," Clark began her career in the late 1940s and was one of the first female marine biologists. She was also one of the first people to study sharks. In 1955, Clark started the Cape Haze Marine Laboratory, a one-room lab that became the internationally recognized Mote Marine Laboratory in 1967.

The life history of the more than 20 species in the Squalus group is still a mystery to scientists, but researchers fear the shark population is threatened by deep-sea commercial fisheries that capture the sharks incidentally as bycatch.

"This type of research is essential to the conservation and management of sharks," Mariah Pfleger, lead author and marine scientist at Oceana, an ocean-conservation nonprofit and advocacy organization, said in a statement. "The first step to successfully conserving these species that live in deeper waters, like Genie's dogfish, is finding out what is down there in the first place."

The researchers published their description of the new species today (July 17) in the journal Zootaxa.

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