Even when half grown the patterns and colors of most yellow-bellied sliders is bright and precise.
Worry not! Populations of the yellow-bellied slider are alive and well. It is only the ongoing name games between geneticists and Linnaean biologists that have dictated the changes, shrunken the realm, if you will, of this venerable, wide spread, and well known turtle.
At one time, in one subspecies or the other,
Trachemys (once
Pseudemys)
scripta ranged from our northern tier states southward through Mexico and Central America, and across South America to Argentina. There were then 16 subspecies. Since those early days, varying by authority and their outlook on taxonomy (and their need for a paper), the number of species and subspecies has yo-yoed radically with some researchers elevating a subspecies to full species status while another sinks the creature in question into taxonomic synonymy. The good thing about all of these changes is that they are only on paper, except for those sacrificed during research, the turtles themselves not giving a hoot.
What once was: USA; Was
T. scripta scripta, yellow-bellied slider, still valid; was
T. s. elegans, red eared slider, still valid; was
T. s. troosti, Cumberland slider, still valid; was
T. s. gaigeae, now
T. gaigeae, Big Bend slider.
Mexico and Central America: Was
T. s. venusta, now
T. venusta venusta, Meso-American slider; was
T. s. cataspila, now
T. venusta cataspila, Huastecan slider.
Was T.s nebulosa, now T. nebulosa nebulosa, Baja California slider; was T. s. hiltoni, now T. nebulosa hiltoni, Rio Fuerte slider; was T. s. ornata, now T. nebulosa ornata, Ornate slider.
Was
T. s. grayi, now
T. grayi, Guatemalan slider; was
T. s. yaquia, now
T. yaquia, Yaqui slider; was
T. s. taylori, now
T. taylori, Cuatro Cienegas slider; was
T. s. emolli, now
T. emolli, Nicaraguan slider.
South America: Was
T. s. callirostris, now
T. callirostris callirostris, Colombian slider; was
T. s. chichiriviche, now
T. callirostris chichiriviche, Venezulan slider.
Was
T. s. dorbigni, now
T. dorbigni dorbigni, Southern D’Orbigny’s slider; was not originally designated, now
T. dorbigni braziliensis, Brazilian slider.
So, if we exclude the many introduced and established populations of the red-eared slider, we see that the taxonomic realm of the
Trachemys scripta has been reduced from much of the new world to only the USA, a significant change indeed—or not. Just sayin’.
This is a hatchling yellow-belly.
On sunny days the yellow-bellied slider may be commonly seen basking.
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