Impressed tortoise
| Impressed tortoise |
 |
| A specimen of Manouria impressa |
| |
| |
| Scientific classification |
| Kingdom: |
Animalia |
| Phylum: |
Chordata |
| Class: |
Reptilia |
| Order: |
Testudines |
| Family: |
Testudinidae |
| Genus: |
Manouria |
| Species: |
M. impressa |
| Binomial name |
Manouria impressa
|
| Synonyms[1] |
- Geoemyda impressa Günther, 1882
- Geoemyda latinuchalis Vaillant, 1894
- Testudo pseudemys Boulenger, 1903
- Testudo latinuchalis Siebenrock, 1909
- Testudo impressa Smith, 1922
- Geochelone impressa Pritchard, 1967
- Manouria impressa Bour, 1980
- Manowria impressa Zhou & Zhou, 1991
|
The impressed tortoise (Manouria impressa), occurs in mountainous forest areas in Southeast Asia in Burma, southern China, Thailand, Laos, Vietnam, Cambodia and Malaysia. The species has a golden brown shell and skin. Adults are much smaller than their relatives the Asian forest tortoise (Manouria emys), with a maximum size of 35 cm.
The impressed tortoise lives at high elevations, up to 2,000 m. Its behavior is little known; diet in the wild may consist largely of mushrooms, although bamboo shoots are also eaten. The species is known for being difficult to keep alive in captivity; although its status in the wild is uncertain, it is eaten widely by local people and little captive breeding has occurred.
See also
 | Biology portal |
References
External links