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Checklist of herpetofauna listed in the CITES appendices and in EC Regulation No 338/97 PDF

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Preview Checklist of herpetofauna listed in the CITES appendices and in EC Regulation No 338/97

JNCC Report No. 378 Checklist of herpetofauna listed in the CITES appendices and in EC Regulation No. 338/97 10th Edition 2005 compiled by UNEP-WCMC © JNCC 2005 The JNCC is the forum through which the three country conservation agencies - the Countryside Council for Wales, English Nature and Scottish Natural Heritage - deliver their statutory responsibilities for Great Britain as a whole, and internationally. These responsibilities contribute to sustaining and enriching biological diversity, enhancing geological features and sustaining natural systems. As well as a source of advice and knowledge for the public, JNCC is the Government's wildlife adviser, providing guidance on the development of policies for, or affecting, nature conservation in Great Britain or internationally. Published by: Joint Nature Conservation Committee Copyright: 2005 Joint Nature Conservation Committee ISBN: 1st edition published 1979 ISBN 0-86139-075-X 2nd edition published 1981 ISBN 0-86139-095-4 3rd edition published 1983 ISBN 0-86139-224-8 4th edition published 1988 ISBN 0-86139-465-8 5th edition published 1993 ISBN 1-873701-46-2 6th edition published 1995 ISSN 0963-8091 7th edition published 1999 ISSN 0963-8091 8th edition published 2001 ISSN 0963-8091 9th edition published 2003 ISSN 0963-8091 10th edition published 2005 ISSN 0963-8091 Citation: UNEP-WCMC (2005). Checklist of herpetofauna listed in the CITES appendices and in EC Regulation 338/97. 10th edition. JNCC Report No. 378. Further copies of this report are available from: CITES Unit Joint Nature Conservation Committee Monkstone House City Road Peterborough PE1 1JY United Kingdom Tel: +44 1733 562626 Fax: +44 1733 555948 This document can also be downloaded from: http://www.ukcites.gov.uk and www.jncc.gov.uk Prepared under contract from the Joint Nature Conservation Committee by UNEP- WCMC. The UNEP World Conservation Monitoring Centre was established in 2000 as the world biodiversity information and assessment centre of the United Nations Environment Programme. The roots of the organization go back to 1979, when it was founded as the IUCN Conservation Monitoring Centre. In 1988 the World Conservation Monitoring Centre was created jointly by IUCN, WWF International and UNEP. The financial support and guidance of these organizations in the Centre’s formative years is gratefully acknowledged. The designations of geographical entities in this report, and the presentation of the material, do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever on the part of JNCC or WCMC concerning the legal status of any country, territory, or area, or of its authorities, or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries. Contents MYOBATRACHIDAE......................83 RANIDAE....................................83 Acknowledgements.................... i Introduction .............................. i CAUDATA..................................83 Explanatory notes..................... ii AMBYSTOMIDAE..........................83 Introductory References............v CRYPTOBRANCHIDAE...................84 CHORDATA......................................1 References.............................. 85 REPTILIA.....................................1 Index.................................... 122 TESTUDINES..............................1 DERMATEMYDIDAE........................1 PLATYSTERNIDAE.........................1 EMYDIDAE...................................1 TESTUDINIDAE.............................7 CHELONIIDAE.............................12 DERMOCHELYIDAE......................15 CARETTOCHELYIDAE...................15 TRIONYCHIDAE...........................15 PELOMEDUSIDAE........................17 CHELIDAE..................................19 CROCODYLIA............................19 ALLIGATORIDAE.........................19 CROCODYLIDAE..........................21 GAVIALIDAE...............................23 RHYNCHOCEPHALIA.................23 SPHENODONTIDAE......................23 SAURIA....................................23 GEKKONIDAE.............................23 AGAMIDAE.................................30 CHAMAELEONIDAE......................31 IGUANIDAE................................44 LACERTIDAE...............................46 CORDYLIDAE..............................46 GERRHOSAURIDAE......................50 TEIIDAE.....................................50 SCINCIDAE................................51 XENOSAURIDAE..........................51 HELODERMATIDAE......................51 VARANIDAE................................52 SERPENTES..............................58 LOXOCEMIDAE ...........................58 PYTHONIDAE..............................58 BOIDAE.....................................62 BOLYERIIDAE.............................67 TROPIDOPHIIDAE.......................67 COLUBRIDAE..............................69 ELAPIDAE..................................71 HYDROPHIIDAE..........................73 VIPERIDAE.................................73 AMPHIBIA..................................74 ANURA.....................................74 BUFONIDAE................................74 DENDROBATIDAE........................75 MANTELLIDAE............................81 MICROHYLIDAE..........................82 Acknowledgements This checklist was compiled by UNEP-WCMC under contract with the Joint Nature Conservation Committee. The volume builds on earlier editions, and the numerous contributors to those editions are acknowledged. UNEP-WCMC staff involved in the production of this volume include Tim Inskipp, Sarah Ferriss, James O’Carroll and Tobias Garstecki. The project was supervised by Gerardo Fragoso. Vin Fleming, Alison Littlewood and Nichola Burnett of the JNCC CITES Unit are thanked for providing advice and guidance throughout. Introduction In April 1991, the Nature Conservancy and Wijnstekers (2003). For information Council for England (English Nature), on the implementation of CITES in the Countryside Council for Wales and EU, see European Commission (2005). Scottish Natural Heritage acting together For information by country on the through the Joint Nature Conservation diversity and status of herpetofauna and Committee were appointed by the other taxonomic groups, and for a Secretary of State for the Environment general review of biodiversity, readers as the United Kingdom's Scientific are referred to Groombridge and Jenkins Authority for Animals under the (2002). Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and In a publication of this nature, it is Flora (CITES). CITES regulates inevitable that users will discover entries international trade in wild animals and that need correcting or updating. The plants and in products derived from publishers and UNEP-WCMC would be them, to help to ensure their grateful to receive details of those conservation on a worldwide scale. entries so that the necessary changes can be made in the database from which The intention of this publication is to this document is produced. provide a list of the species and subspecies of mammal included in the The database is continually updated and CITES Appendices, together with their the downloaded version of this document conservation status category in the 2004 may contain more recent information IUCN Red List of threatened species than the original printed publication. (IUCN, 2004) and the appropriate Annex in EC Regulation 338/97 (and subsequent updates). This revised edition incorporates additions and amendments to the CITES appendices up to and including those made at the 13th Conference of the Parties in Thailand in October 2004 (effective from 12 January 2005) and those outlined in CITES Notification 2004/074 and Notification 2005/029. The most recent EC Regulation to amend the Annexes is 1332/2005, effective from 12 August 2005. For background material on the rationale of the IUCN threat categories, readers are referred to IUCN (2004); for background on the workings of CITES, recommended works are Favre (1989) i Explanatory notes Tupinambis (Avila Pires, 1995; Cei, 1993; Manzani & Abe, 1997; Manzani & Abe, 2002; Colli et al. 1998). Each species is typically represented by Varanidae (Böhme, 2003; Jacobs, 2003) a block of text including scientific name Boidae (McDiarmid et al., 1999 except (with alternatives), common names in for the retention of the genera the three official CITES languages Acrantophis, Sanzinia, Calabaria & (where available), geographic range, Lichanura and the recognition of CITES Appendix, EC Regulation 338/97 Epicrates maurus as a valid species; Annex, and Red List category. Where a also Dirksen, 2002). species has component populations or Bolyeriidae (McDiarmid et al., 1999). formal subspecies which are treated Loxocemidae (McDiarmid et al., 1999). differently by CITES, the species entry is Pythonidae (McDiarmid et al., 1999; subdivided appropriately. Harvey et al., 2000; Keogh et al., 2001). Scientific names Tropidophiidae (McDiarmid et al., 1999; Hedges et al. 1999; Hedges & For each taxon, the scientific name is Garrido, 1999; Hedges & Garrido, given first (as listed in the CITES 2002; Hedges et al., 2001). appendices), with the most frequently Naja (Wüster, 1996; Slowinski & Wüster, used synonyms listed beneath the 2000). scientific name. Viperidae (McDiarmid et al., 1999). The sequence of families within orders No standard references have been conforms with the CITES Appendices adopted by CITES for (thus the amphibian families are in Hoplodactylus spp., Naultinus spp., alphabetical order while the reptile Uroplatus spp., Brachylophus spp., families follow a conventional systematic Conolophus spp., Cyclura spp., Iguana order). The genera and species are in spp., Dracaena spp. & Heloderma spp. alphabetical order within each family. Amphibians: Frost (2002) The taxonomic sources adopted by CITES are given below. Common names Reptiles: Common names (in English, French and Spanish where available) appear on the Testudines (Wermuth and Mertens, line immediately following the scientific 1996; Karl & Tichy, 1999; McCord et name and synonyms. However, few of al., 2000; McCord & Pritchard, 2002; the listed taxa have regularly or Perälä, 2001; Webb, 2002). universally used common names. In Crocodylia (Wermuth and Mertens, some cases, identical trade names 1996). appear to be used for different taxa. Rhynchocephalia (Wermuth and Mertens, Secondary English common names have 1996). been included wherever this was Sauria (Pough et al, 1998 for considered useful, including non-English delimitation of families within the names commonly used by English Sauria) speakers. Phelsuma (Hallmann et al., 1997; Nussbaum et al., 2000; Rösler et al., Spanish and French names have been 2001) taken from the CITES Identification Uromastyx (Wilms, 2001) Manual Series and other sources. Chamaeleonidae (Klaver and Böhme, 1997, except for the recognition of Other information Calumma andringitaensis, C. guillaumeti, C. hilleniusi & The three columns headed CITES, EC C. marojezensis as valid species; also Reg. and RL list the following information Andreone et al., 2001; Böhme, 1997; for each taxon. Jesu et al., 1999; Tilbury, 1998). Cordylidae (Broadley, 2002). Crocodilurus (Massary & Hoogmoed, 2001). ii CITES It should be noted that, when a species I, II or III in this column refers to the is listed as occurring within a given area appendix in which the taxon is listed or range state, it may not occur under the Convention on International throughout that country or area, and Trade in Endangered Species of Wild may be confined to only one or a few Fauna and Flora. NC = non-CITES localities. This is particularly true for migratory species. The two-letter abbreviations following Appendix III entries denote the countries Without surveying the range of each whose governments have placed the taxon in the field, it is necessary to rely taxon in this appendix, as follows: on published records. Many taxonomic works give the range of a taxon in terms CN China of broad geographical areas, rather than GH Ghana of political units. While some countries HN Honduras have a relatively well-known and IN India well-reported herpetofauna, some others NZ New Zealand do not do so. These factors may occasionally have resulted in some of the EC Reg. geographical ranges given here being incomplete or inaccurate, although every The letters in this column refer to the effort has been made to prevent this. Annex of EC Regulation 338/97 in which the taxon is listed. NR= non Regulation. Distribution notes RL A question mark ‘?’ preceding a geographical range has been used to Threat categories follow those given in indicate that there is some uncertainty in the 2004 IUCN Red List (IUCN, 2004) the occurrence of the species in that and are as follows: range. EX Extinct A country where the species is known to EW Extinct in the Wild be extinct is denoted by ‘(ex)’, or by CR Critically Endangered ‘(ex?)’ where there is still a small EN Endangered possibility that the species survives, or VU Vulnerable where recent searches have been LR Lower Risk unsuccessful. LR/cd Lower Risk/Conservation dependent Range states where the species has been LR/nt Lower Risk/Near threatened introduced are denoted by ‘[int]’. Range LR/lc Lower Risk/Least concern states where the species has been re- DD Data Deficient introduced are denoted by '[re-int]'. NE Not Evaluated References Note that the current Red List includes assessments using both the 1994 and The numbers in the right-hand column the 2001 Categories and Criteria. refer to entries in the reference list at the end of this document. Many of these Geographical range are general works relevant to more than one geographical range or concerned The geographical range of each taxon is with particular groups of species. Single generally given in terms of political units country faunas and more specific arranged alphabetically. Small island references have generally been inserted dependencies are also listed in brackets after the appropriate country alphabetically. in the listings for geographical range. Place-names and names of countries follow the Times Atlas (2003) and United Nations Cartographic Section (2004). iii Dependent territories In the text, parent countries of island groups or dependent territories are omitted. These are listed below: American Samoa, USA Heard and Macdonald Islands, Anguilla, United Kingdom Australia Aruba, Netherlands Marshall Islands, USA Azores, Portugal Martinique, France Bermuda, United Kingdom Mayotte, France Bouvet Island, Norway Montserrat, United Kingdom British Indian Ocean Territory, United Netherlands Antilles, Netherlands Kingdom New Caledonia, France British Virgin Islands, United Niue, New Zealand Kingdom Norfolk Island, Australia Cayman Islands, United Kingdom Northern Marianas, USA Christmas Island, Australia Pitcairn Islands, United Kingdom Cocos (Keeling) Islands, Australia Puerto Rico, USA Cook Islands, New Zealand Réunion, France Falkland Islands, United Kingdom Saint Helena, United Kingdom Faeroe Islands, Denmark (including its dependencies of Federated States of Micronesia, USA Ascension and Tristan da Cunha) French Guiana, France Saint Pierre and Miquelon, France French Polynesia, France Svalbard and Jan Mayen Islands, French Southern and Antarctic Norway Territories, France Tokelau, New Zealand Gibraltar, United Kingdom Turks and Caicos Islands, United Greenland, Denmark Kingdom Guadeloupe, France Virgin Islands of the United States, Guam, USA USA Wallis and Futuna, France iv Introductory references Andreone, F., Mattioli, F., Jesu, R. and http://research.amnh.org/herpetology/a Randrianirina, J. E. (2001) Two new mphibia/index.html as of 23 August 2002 chameleons of the genus Calumma from north-east Madagascar, with observations on Groombridge, B. and Jenkins, M.D. 2002. hemipenial morphology in the Calumma World atlas of biodiversity. Prepared by furcifer group (Reptilia, Squamata, the UNEP World Conservation Monitoring Chamaeleonidae). Herpetological Journal 11: Centre. University of California Press, 53-68. Berkeley, USA. Avila Pires, T. C. S. 1995. Lizards of Hallmann, G., Krüger, J. and Trautmann, G. Brazilian Amazonia. Zool. Verh. 299: 706 1997. Faszinierende Taggeckos – Die pp. Gattung Phelsuma. Natur & Tier-Verlag. Böhme, W. 1997. Eine neue Chamäleon art Harvey, M. B., Barker, D. B., Ammerman, L. aus der Calumma gastrotaenia – K. and Chippindale, P. T. 2000. Verwandtschaft Ost-Madagaskars. Systematics of pythons of the Morelia Herpetofauna (Weinstadt) 19 (107): 5- amethistina complex (Serpentes: Boidae) 10. with the description of three new species. Herpetological Monographs 14: 139-185. Böhme, W. 2003. Checklist of the living monitor lizards of the world (family Hedges, B. S., Estrada, A. R. and Diaz, L. M. Varanidae). Zool. Verh. Leiden 341: 4- 1999. New snake (Tropidophis) from 43. western Cuba. Copeia 1999(2): 376-381. Broadley, D. G. 2002. CITES Standard Hedges, S. B. and Garrido, O. 1999. A new reference for the species of Cordylus snake of the genus Tropidophis (Cordylidae, Reptilia) prepared at the (Tropidophiidae) from central Cuba. request of the CITES Nomenclature Journal of Herpetology 33: 436-441. Committee. CoP12 Inf. 14. Hedges, B. S. and Garrido, O. 2002. A new Cei, J. M. 1993. Reptiles del noroeste, snake of the genus Tropidophis nordeste y este de la Argentina – (Tropidophiidae) from eastern Cuba. herpetofauna de las selvas subtropicales, Journal of Herpetology 36:157-161. puna y pampa. Monografie XIV, Museo Regionale di Scienze Naturali. Hedges, B. S., Garrido, O. and Diaz, L. M. 2001. A new banded snake of the genus Colli, G. R., Péres, A. K. and da Cunha, H. J. Tropidophis (Tropidophiidae) from north- 1998. A new species of Tupinambis central Cuba. Journal of Herpetology 35: (Squamata: Teiidae) from central Brazil, 615-617. with an analysis of morphological and genetic variation in the genus. IUCN. 2004. 2004 IUCN Red List of Herpetologica 54: 477-492. threatened species. IUCN, Gland, Switzerland. www.redlist.org Dirksen, L. 2002. Anakondas. NTV Wissenschaft. Jacobs, H. J. 2003. A further new emerald tree monitor lizard of the Varanus European Commission 2005. The European prasinus species group from Waigeo, Community and trade in wild fauna and West Irian (Squamata: Sauria: flora. Varanidae). Salamandra 39(2): 65-74. http://europa.eu.int/comm/environment/ cites/home_en.htm Jesu, R., Mattioli, F. and Schimenti, G. 1999. On the discovery of a new large Favre, D. S. 1989. International trade in chameleon inhabiting the limestone endangered species: a guide to CITES. outcrops of western Madagascar: Furcifer Martinus Nijhoff, Dordrecht. nicosiai sp. nov. (Reptilia, Chamaeleonidae). Doriana 7(311): 1-14. Frost, D. R., ed. 2002. Amphibian Species of the World: a taxonomic and geographic Karl, H.-V. and Tichy, G. 1999. Die reference. Taxonomie von Homopus bergeri v Lindholm 1906 (Testudines: Testudinoidea). Mauritiana 17: 277-284. Pough, F. H., Andrews, R. M., Cadle, J. E., Crump, M. L., Savitzky, A. H. and Wells, Keogh, J. S., Barker, D. G. and Shine, R. K. D. 1998. Herpetology. 2001. Heavily exploited but poorly known: systematics and biogeography of Rösler , H., Obst, F. J. and Seipp, R. 2001. commercially harvested pythons (Python Eine neue Taggecko-Art von curtus group) in Southeast Asia. Westmadagaskar: Phelsuma hielscheri sp. Biological Journal of the Linnean Society n. (Reptilia: Sauria: Gekkonidae). 73: 113-129. Zoologische Abhandlungen, Staatliches Museum für Tierkunde, Dresden 51: 51- Klaver, C. J. J. and Böhme, W. 1997. 60. Chamaeleonidae. Das Tierreich 112: 85 pp. Slowinski, J. B. and Wüster, W. 2000. A new cobra (Elapidae: Naja) from Myanmar Manzani, P. R. and Abe, A. S. 1997. A new (Burma). Herpetologica 56: 257-270. species of Tupinambis Daudin, 1802 (Squamata, Teiidae) from central Brazil. The Times Atlas of the World 2003. Boletim do Museu Nacional Nov. Ser. Comprehensive (eleventh) edition. Times Zool. 382: 1-10. Books, London UK. Manzani, P. R. and Abe, A. S. 2002. A new Tilbury, C. 1998. Two new chameleons species of Tupinambis Daudin, 1803 from (Sauria: Chamaeleonidae) from isolated southeastern Brazil (Squamata, Teiidae). Afromontane forests in Sudan and Arquivos do Museu Nacional, Rio de Ethiopia. Bonner Zoologische Beiträge Janeiro 60(4): 295-302. 47: 293-299. Massary, J.-C. de and Hoogmoed, M. 2001. United Nations Cartographic Section, 2004. The valid name for Crocodilurus List of Territories. Technical Paper 2004. lacertinus auctorum (nec Daudin, 1802) http://www.un.org/Depts/Cartographic/e (Squamata: Teiidae). Journal of nglish/geoname.pdf Herpetology 35: 353-357. Webb, R. G. 2002. Observations on the McCord, W. P., Iverson, J. B., Spinks, P. Q. Giant Softshell Turtle, Pelochelys cantorii, and Shaffer, H. B. 2000. A new genus of with description of a new species. Geoemydid turtle from Asia. Hamadryad Hamadryad 27 (1): 99-107. 25: 86-90. Wermuth, H. and Mertens, R. 1996 (reprint). McCord, W. P. and Pritchard, P. C. H. 2002. Schildkröte, Krokodile, Brückenechsen. A review of the softshell turtles of the Gustav Fischer Verlag, Jena. genus Chitra, with the description of new taxa from Myanmar and Indonesia (Java). Wijnstekers, W. 2003. The evolution of Hamadryad 27 (1): 11-56. CITES. Seventh edition. CITES Secretariat, Lausanne, Switzerland. McDiarmid, R. W., Campbell, J. A. and Touré, T. A. 1999. Snake Species of the Wilms, T. 2001. Dornschwanzagamen: World. A Taxonomic and Geographic Lebensweise, Pflege, Zucht. Herpeton Reference. Volume 1. The Herpetologists’ Verlag. League, Washington, DC. Wüster, W. 1996. Taxonomic change and Nussbaum, R. A., Raxworthy, C. J., toxinology: systematic revisions of the Raselimanana, A. P. and Ramanamanjato, Asiatic cobras Naja naja species complex. J. B. 2000. New species of day gecko, Toxicon 34: 339-406. Phelsuma Gray (Reptilia: Squamata: Gekkonidae), from the Reserve Naturelle Integrale d'Andohahela, south Madagascar. Copeia 2000: 763-770. Perälä, J. 2001. A new species of Testudo (Testudines: Testudinidae) from the Middle East, with implications for conservation. Journal of Herpetology 35: 567-582. v i CITES EC Reg.    RL References Phylum:  CHORDATA Class:  REPTILIA Order:  TESTUDINES Family:  PLATYSTERNIDAE Platysternon megacephalum Gray, 1831 II B EN E: Big-headed Turtle China [3396, 5050]; Hong Kong, China [5227]; Lao People's Democratic Republic [5037]; Myanmar [3396, 10420]; Thailand [3396, 5053, 6262]; Viet Nam [3396]             Family:  DERMATEMYDIDAE Dermatemys mawii Gray, 1847 II B EN 3396 Synonyms: Limnochelone micrura Werner, 1901, Emys berardii Duméril, Bibron & Duméril, 1851, Emys dermatemys Duméril & Bocourt, 1888, Dermatemys abnormis Cope, 1868, Dermatemys salvinii Gray, 1870 E: Central American River Turtle, F: Dermatemyde de Mawe, Tortue de Tabasco, S: Plana, Tortuga blanca Belize [3525]; Guatemala; Honduras; Mexico   CITES Identification Manual Reference: A-301.005.001.001             Family:  EMYDIDAE Annamemys annamensis (Siebenrock, 1903) II B Synonyms: Annamemys groschovskiae Tien, 1957, Annamemys merkleni Bourret, 1939, Mauremys annamensis (Siebenrock, 1903), Cyclemys annamensis Siebenrock, 1903 E: Annam Leaf Turtle, Annam Pond Turtle, F: Emyde d'Annam Viet Nam [3396, 5173]             Batagur baska (Gray, 1831) I A CR 3396, 5226 Synonyms: Tetronyx longicollis Lesson, 1832, Tetraonyx lessonii Duméril & Bibron, 1835, Emys baska Gray, 1831, Emys batagur Gray, 1831, Emys tetraonyx Temminck & Schlegel, 1833 E: Batagur, Common Batagur, Four-toed Terrapin, River Terrapin, F: Batagur malais, Émyde fluviale indienne, S: Galápago Batagur, Galápago indio Bangladesh [3396, 5228, 5236]; Cambodia [3396, 5143, 25563]; India [3263, 3264, 3396, 5175]; Indonesia [3396, 5094]: Sumatera [5085, 5094]; Malaysia [3396, 5095]: Peninsular Malaysia; Myanmar [3396, 5084, 10420]; ?Singapore; Thailand (ex) [3396, 5053, 5081, 6262]; Viet Nam (ex)   CITES Identification Manual Reference: A-301.007.002.001             Callagur borneoensis  II B CR 4988, 5226 (Schlegel & S. Müller, 1844) Synonyms: Callagur picta (Gray, 1862), Batagur picta Gray, 1862, Emys borneoensis Schlegel & S. Müller, 1844, Kachuga major Gray, 1873, Kachuga brookei Bartlett, 1895 E: Painted Batagur, Painted Terrapin, Saw-jawed Turtle, Three-striped Batagur, F: Émyde peinte de Bornéo, S: Galápago pintado ?Brunei Darussalam; Indonesia [5094]: Kalimantan [3396, 5094], Sumatera [3396, 5085, 5094]; Malaysia [3396, 5095]: Peninsular Malaysia [3396], Sarawak [3396]; Thailand [3396, 5053, 6262]             Chinemys megalocephala Fang, 1934 III CN C EN 10455 E: Big-headed Pond Turtle China [5050]             Chinemys nigricans (Gray, 1834) III CN C EN Synonyms: Chinemys kwangtungensis (Pope, 1934), Geoclemys kwangtungensis Pope, 1934, Emys nigricans Gray, 1834, Clemmys nigricans (Gray, 1834), Clemmys schmackeri Boettger, 1894, Damonia nigricans (Gray, 1834), Damonia mutica Boulenger, 1889 E: Red-necked Pond Turtle China [3396, 5050]             Chinemys reevesii (Gray, 1831) III CN C EN Synonyms: Geoclemys grangeri K. P. Schmidt, 1927, Geoclemys paracaretta Chang, 1929, Emys reevesii Gray, 1831, Emys vulgaris picta Schlegel, 1844, Emys japonica Duméril, Bibron & Duméril, 1851, Damonia unicolor Gray, 1873, Damonia reevesii (Gray, 1831) E: Reeves's Turtle   1

Description:
Synonyms: Pangshura sylhetensis Jerdon, 1870, Jerdonella sylhetensis (Jerdon, 1870). E: Assam Roofed Turtle, Sylhet Roofed Turtle, F: Kachuga de l'Assam.
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