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  • Turtle

    Turtles are reptiles of the order Testudines, characterized by a special shell developed mainly from their ribs. Modern turtles are divided into two major groups, the Pleurodira (side necked turtles) and Cryptodira (hidden necked turtles), which differ in the way the head retracts. There are 360 living and recently extinct species of turtles, including land-dwelling tortoises and freshwater terrapins. They are found on most continents, some islands and, in the case of sea turtles, much of the ocean. Like other amniotes (reptiles, birds, and mammals) they breathe air and do not lay eggs underwater, although many species live in or around water.

    Turtle shells are made mostly of bone; the upper part is the domed carapace, while the underside is the flatter plastron or belly-plate. Its outer surface is covered in scales made of keratin, the material of hair, horns, and claws. The carapace bones develop from ribs that grow sideways and develop into broad flat plates that join up to cover the body. Turtles are ectotherms or “cold-blooded”, meaning that their internal temperature varies with their direct environment. They are generally opportunistic omnivores and mainly feed on plants and animals with limited movements. Many turtles migrate short distances seasonally. Sea turtles are the only reptiles that migrate long distances to lay their eggs on a favored beach.

    Turtles have appeared in myths and folktales around the world. Some terrestrial and freshwater species are widely kept as pets. Turtles have been hunted for their meat, for use in traditional medicine, and for their shells. Sea turtles are often killed accidentally as bycatch in fishing nets. Turtle habitats around the world are being destroyed. As a result of these pressures, many species are extinct or threatened with extinction.

    Naming and etymology

    The word turtle is borrowed from the French word tortue or tortre ‘turtle, tortoise‘.[3] It is a common name and may be used without knowledge of taxonomic distinctions. In North America, it may denote the order as a whole. In Britain, the name is used for sea turtles as opposed to freshwater terrapins and land-dwelling tortoises. In Australia, which lacks true tortoises (family Testudinidae), non-marine turtles were traditionally called tortoises, but more recently turtle has been used for the entire group.[4]

    The name of the order, Testudines (/tɛˈstjuːdɪniːz/  teh-STEW-din-eez), is based on the Latin word testudo ‘tortoise’;[5] and was coined by German naturalist August Batsch in 1788.[1] The order has also been historically known as Chelonii (Latreille 1800) and Chelonia (Ross and Macartney 1802),[2] which are based on the Ancient Greek word χελώνη (chelone) ‘tortoise’.[6][7] Testudines is the official order name due to the principle of priority.[2] The term chelonian is used as a formal name for members of the group.[1][8]

    Anatomy and physiology

    Size

    The largest living species of turtle (and fourth-largest reptile) is the leatherback turtle, which can reach over 2.7 m (8 ft 10 in) in length and weigh over 500 kg (1,100 lb).[9] The largest known turtle was Archelon ischyros, a Late Cretaceous sea turtle up to 4.5 m (15 ft) long, 5.25 m (17 ft) wide between the tips of the front flippers, and estimated to have weighed over 2,200 kg (4,900 lb).[10] The smallest living turtle is Chersobius signatus of South Africa, measuring no more than 10 cm (3.9 in) in length[11] and weighing 172 g (6.1 oz).[12]

    Shell

    Main article: Turtle shell

    Photograph of one half of a tortoise skeleton, cut in half vertically showing the vertebrae following curving along the carapace
    Sagittal section of a tortoise skeleton

    The shell of a turtle is unique among vertebrates and serves to protect the animal and provide shelter from the elements.[13][14][15] It is primarily made of 50–60 bones and consists of two parts: the domed, dorsal (back) carapace and the flatter, ventral (belly) plastron. They are connected by lateral (side) extensions of the plastron.[13][16]

    The carapace is fused with the vertebrae and ribs while the plastron is formed from bones of the shoulder girdlesternum, and gastralia (abdominal ribs).[13] During development, the ribs grow sideways into a carapacial ridge, unique to turtles, entering the dermis (inner skin) of the back to support the carapace. The development is signaled locally by proteins known as fibroblast growth factors that include FGF10.[17] The shoulder girdle in turtles is made up of two bones, the scapula and the coracoid.[18] Both the shoulder and pelvic girdles of turtles are located within the shell and hence are effectively within the rib cage. The trunk ribs grow over the shoulder girdle during development.[19]

    Drawing of a section through a turtle embryo showing formation of the shell, with the ribs growing sideways
    Development of the shell. The ribs are growing sideways into the carapacial ridge, seen here as a bud, to support the carapace.[17]

    The shell is covered in epidermal (outer skin) scales known as scutes that are made of keratin, the same substance that makes up hair and fingernails. Typically, a turtle has 38 scutes on the carapace and 16 on the plastron, giving them 54 in total. Carapace scutes are divided into “marginals” around the margin and “vertebrals” over the vertebral column, though the scute that overlays the neck is called the “cervical”. “Pleurals” are present between the marginals and vertebrals.[20] Plastron scutes include gulars (throat), humerals, pectorals, abdominals, and anals. Side-necked turtles additionally have “intergular” scutes between the gulars.[16][21] Turtle scutes are usually structured like mosaic tiles, but some species, like the hawksbill sea turtle, have overlapping scutes on the carapace.[16]

    The shapes of turtle shells vary with the adaptations of the individual species, and sometimes with sex. Land-dwelling turtles are more dome-shaped, which appears to make them more resistant to being crushed by large animals. Aquatic turtles have flatter, smoother shells that allow them to cut through the water. Sea turtles in particular have streamlined shells that reduce drag and increase stability in the open ocean. Some turtle species have pointy or spiked shells that provide extra protection from predators and camouflage against the leafy ground. The lumps of a tortoise shell can tilt its body when it gets flipped over, allowing it to flip back. In male tortoises, the tip of the plastron is thickened and used for butting and ramming during combat.[22]

    Shells vary in flexibility. Some species, such as box turtles, lack the lateral extensions and instead have the carapace bones fully fused or ankylosed together. Several species have hinges on their shells, usually on the plastron, which allow them to expand and contract. Softshell turtles have rubbery edges, due to the loss of bones. The leatherback turtle has hardly any bones in its shell, but has thick connective tissue and an outer layer of leathery skin.[23]

    Head and neck

    Closeup of the head and neck of turtle
    Head and neck of a European pond turtle

    The turtle’s skull is unique among living amniotes (which includes reptiles, birds and mammals); it is solid and rigid with no openings for muscle attachment (temporal fenestrae).[24][25] Muscles instead attach to recesses in the back of the skull. Turtle skulls vary in shape, from the long and narrow skulls of softshells to the broad and flattened skull of the mata mata.[25] Some turtle species have developed large and thick heads, allowing for greater muscle mass and stronger bites.[26]

    Turtles that are carnivorous or durophagous (eating hard-shelled animals) have the most powerful bites. For example, the durophagous Mesoclemmys nasuta has a bite force of 432 lbf (1,920 N). Species that are insectivorouspiscivorous (fish-eating), or omnivorous have lower bite forces.[27] Living turtles lack teeth but have beaks made of keratin sheaths along the edges of the jaws.[28][13] These sheaths may have sharp edges for cutting meat, serrations for clipping plants, or broad plates for breaking mollusks.[29] Sea turtles, and several extinct forms, have evolved a bony secondary palate which completely separates the oral and nasal cavities.[30]

    The necks of turtles are highly flexible, possibly to compensate for their rigid shells. Some species, like sea turtles, have short necks while others, such as snake-necked turtles, have long ones. Despite this, all turtle species have eight neck vertebrae, a consistency not found in other reptiles but similar to mammals.[31] Some snake-necked turtles have both long necks and large heads, limiting their ability to lift them when not in water.[26] Some turtles have folded structures in the larynx or glottis that vibrate to produce sound. Other species have elastin-rich vocal cords.[32][33]

    Limbs and locomotion

    Due to their heavy shells, turtles are slow-moving on land. A desert tortoise moves at only 0.22–0.48 km/h (0.14–0.30 mph). By contrast, sea turtles can swim at 30 km/h (19 mph).[13] The limbs of turtles are adapted for various means of locomotion and habits and most have five toes. Tortoises are specialized for terrestrial environments and have column-like legs with elephant-like feet and short toes. The gopher tortoise has flattened front limbs for digging in the substrate. Freshwater turtles have more flexible legs and longer toes with webbing, giving them thrust in the water. Some of these species, such as snapping turtles and mud turtles, mainly walk along the water bottom, as they would on land. Others, such as terrapins, swim by paddling with all four limbs, switching between the opposing front and hind limbs, which keeps their direction stable.[13][34]

    Marine turtle swimming
    Sea turtles have streamlined shells and limbs adapted for fast and efficient swimming.[35]

    Sea turtles and the pig-nosed turtle are the most specialized for swimming. Their front limbs have evolved into flippers while the shorter hind limbs are shaped more like rudders. The front limbs provide most of the thrust for swimming, while the hind limbs serve as stabilizers.[13][36] Sea turtles such as the green sea turtle rotate the front limb flippers like a bird’s wings to generate a propulsive force on both the upstroke and on the downstroke. This is in contrast to similar-sized freshwater turtles (measurements having been made on young animals in each case) such as the Caspian turtle, which uses the front limbs like the oars of a rowing boat, creating substantial negative thrust on the recovery stroke in each cycle. In addition, the streamlining of the marine turtles reduces drag. As a result, marine turtles produce a propulsive force twice as large, and swim six times as fast, as freshwater turtles. The swimming efficiency of young marine turtles is similar to that of fast-swimming fish of open water, like mackerel.[35]

    Compared to other reptiles, turtles tend to have reduced tails, but these vary in both length and thickness among species and between sexes. Snapping turtles and the big-headed turtle have longer tails; the latter uses it for balance while climbing. The cloaca is found underneath and at the base, and the tail itself houses the reproductive organs. Hence, males have longer tails to contain the penis. In sea turtles, the tail is longer and more prehensile in males, who use it to grasp mates. Several turtle species have spines on their tails.[37][24]

    Senses

    head of a red-eared slider turtle
    The red-eared slider has an exceptional seven types of color-detecting cells in its eyes.[38]

    Turtles make use of vision to find food and mates, avoid predators, and orient themselves. The retina‘s light-sensitive cells include both rods for vision in low light, and cones with three different photopigments for bright light, where they have full-color vision. There is possibly a fourth type of cone that detects ultraviolet, as hatchling sea turtles respond experimentally to ultraviolet light, but it is unknown if they can distinguish this from longer wavelengths. A freshwater turtle, the red-eared slider, has an exceptional seven types of cone cell.[38][39][40]

    Sea turtles orient themselves on land by night, using visual features detected in dim light. They can use their eyes in clear surface water, muddy coasts, the darkness of the deep ocean, and also above water. Unlike in terrestrial turtles, the cornea (the curved surface that lets light into the eye) does not help to focus light on the retina, so focusing underwater is handled entirely by the lens, behind the cornea. The cone cells contain oil droplets placed to shift perception toward the red part of the spectrum, improving color discrimination. Visual acuity, studied in hatchlings, is highest in a horizontal band with retinal cells packed about twice as densely as elsewhere. This gives the best vision along the visual horizon. Sea turtles do not appear to use polarized light for orientation as many other animals do. The deep-diving leatherback turtle lacks specific adaptations to low light, such as large eyes, large lenses, or a reflective tapetum. It may rely on seeing the bioluminescence of prey when hunting in deep water.[38]

    Turtles have no ear openings; the eardrum is covered with scales and encircled by a bony otic capsule, which is absent in other reptiles.[31] Their hearing thresholds are high in comparison to other reptiles, reaching up to 500 Hz in air, but underwater they are more attuned to lower frequencies.[41] The loggerhead sea turtle has been shown experimentally to respond to low sounds, with maximal sensitivity between 100 and 400 Hz.[42]

    Turtles have olfactory (smell) and vomeronasal receptors along the nasal cavity, the latter of which are used to detect chemical signals.[43] Experiments on green sea turtles showed they could learn to respond to a selection of different odorant chemicals such as triethylamine and cinnamaldehyde, which were detected by olfaction in the nose. Such signals could be used in navigation.[44]

    Breathing

    photo of a river turtle with only its nose above water
    A submerged Indian softshell turtle nose-breathing at river surface

    The rigid shell of turtles is not capable of expanding and making room for the lungs, as in other amniotes, so they have had to evolve special adaptations for respiration.[45][46][47] The lungs of turtles are attached directly to the carapace above while below, connective tissue attaches them to the organs.[48] They have multiple lateral (side) and medial (middle) chambers (the numbers of which vary between species) and one terminal (end) chamber.[49]

    The lungs are ventilated using specific groups of abdominal muscles attached to the organs that pull and push on them.[45] Specifically, it is the turtle’s large liver that compresses the lungs. Underneath the lungs, in the coelomic cavity, the liver is connected to the right lung by the root, and the stomach is directly attached to the left lung, and to the liver by a mesentery. When the liver is pulled down, inhalation begins.[46] Supporting the lungs is a wall or septum, which is thought to prevent them from collapsing.[50] During exhalation, the contraction of the transversus abdominis muscle propels the organs into the lungs and expels air. Conversely, during inhalation, the relaxing and flattening of the oblique abdominis muscle pulls the transversus back down, allowing air back into the lungs.[46]

    Although many turtles spend large amounts of their lives underwater, all turtles breathe air and must surface at regular intervals to refill their lungs. Depending on the species, immersion periods vary between a minute and an hour.[51] Some species can respire through the cloaca, which contains large sacs that are lined with many finger-like projections that take up dissolved oxygen from the water.[52]

    Circulation

    photo of a turtle climbing out of mud
    Snapping turtle emerging from period of brumation, in which it buried itself in mud. Turtles have multiple circulatory and physiological adaptations to enable them to go long periods without breathing.[53]

    Turtles share the linked circulatory and pulmonary (lung) systems of vertebrates, where the three-chambered heart pumps deoxygenated blood through the lungs and then pumps the returned oxygenated blood through the body’s tissues. The cardiopulmonary system has both structural and physiological adaptations that distinguish it from other vertebrates. Turtles have a large lung volume and can move blood through non-pulmonary blood vessels, including some within the heart, to avoid the lungs while they are not breathing. They can hold their breath for much longer periods than other reptiles and they can tolerate the resulting low oxygen levels. They can moderate the increase in acidity during anaerobic (non-oxygen-based) respiration by chemical buffering and they can lie dormant for months, in aestivation or brumation.[53]

    The heart has two atria but only one ventricle. The ventricle is subdivided into three chambers. A muscular ridge enables a complex pattern of blood flow so that the blood can be directed either to the lungs via the pulmonary artery, or to the body via the aorta. The ability to separate the two outflows varies between species. The leatherback has a powerful muscular ridge enabling almost complete separation of the outflows, supporting its actively swimming lifestyle. The ridge is less well developed in freshwater turtles like the sliders (Trachemys).[53]

    Turtles are capable of enduring periods of anaerobic respiration longer than many other vertebrates. This process breaks down sugars incompletely to lactic acid, rather than all the way to carbon dioxide and water as in aerobic (oxygen-based) respiration.[53] They make use of the shell as a source of additional buffering agents for combating increased acidity, and as a sink for lactic acid.[54]

    Osmoregulation

    In sea turtles, the bladder is one unit and in most freshwater turtles, it is double-lobed.[55] Sea turtle bladders are connected to two small accessory bladders, located at the sides to the neck of the urinary bladder and above the pubis.[56] Arid-living tortoises have bladders that serve as reserves of water, storing up to 20% of their body weight in fluids. The fluids are normally low in solutes, but higher during droughts when the reptile gains potassium salts from its plant diet. The bladder stores these salts until the tortoise finds fresh drinking water.[57] To regulate the amount of salt in their bodies, sea turtles and the brackish-living diamondback terrapin secrete excess salt in a thick sticky substance from their tear glands. Because of this, sea turtles may appear to be “crying” when on land.[58]

    Thermoregulation

    cooter turtles basking in sunshine near their pond
    Smaller pond turtles, like these northern red-bellied cooters, regulate their temperature by basking in the sun.

    Turtles, like other reptiles, have a limited ability to regulate their body temperature. This ability varies between species, and with body size. Small pond turtles regulate their temperature by crawling out of the water and basking in the sun, while small terrestrial turtles move between sunny and shady places to adjust their temperature. Large species, both terrestrial and marine, have sufficient mass to give them substantial thermal inertia, meaning that they heat up or cool down over many hours. The Aldabra giant tortoise weighs up to some 60 kilograms (130 lb) and is able to allow its temperature to rise to some 33 °C (91 °F) on a hot day, and to fall naturally to around 29 °C (84 °F) by night. Some giant tortoises seek out shade to avoid overheating on sunny days. On Grand Terre Island, food is scarce inland, shade is scarce near the coast, and the tortoises compete for space under the few trees on hot days. Large males may push smaller females out of the shade, and some then overheat and die.[59]

    Adult sea turtles, too, have large enough bodies that they can to some extent control their temperature. The largest turtle, the leatherback, can swim in the waters off Nova Scotia, which may be as cold as 8 °C (46 °F), while their body temperature has been measured at up to 12 °C (22 °F) warmer than the surrounding water. To help keep their temperature up, they have a system of countercurrent heat exchange in the blood vessels between their body core and the skin of their flippers. The vessels supplying the head are insulated by fat around the neck.[59]

    Behavior

    Diet and feeding

    Photograph of a green sea turtle on the seabed, feeding
    green sea turtle grazing on seagrass

    Most turtle species are opportunistic omnivores; land-dwelling species are more herbivorous and aquatic ones more carnivorous.[26] Generally lacking speed and agility, most turtles feed either on plant material or on animals with limited movements like mollusks, worms, and insect larvae.[13] Some species, such as the African helmeted turtle and snapping turtles, eat fish, amphibians, reptiles (including other turtles), birds, and mammals. They may take them by ambush but also scavenge.[60] The alligator snapping turtle has a worm-like appendage on its tongue that it uses to lure fish into its mouth. Tortoises are the most herbivorous group, consuming grasses, leaves, and fruits.[61] Many turtle species, including tortoises, supplement their diet with eggshells, animal bones, hair, and droppings for extra nutrients.[62]

    Turtles generally eat their food in a straightforward way, though some species have special feeding techniques.[13] The yellow-spotted river turtle and the painted turtle may filter feed by skimming the water surface with their mouth and throat open to collect particles of food. When the mouth closes, the throat constricts and water is pushed out through the nostrils and the gap in between the jaws.[63] Some species employ a “gape-and-suck method” where the turtle opens its jaws and expands its throat widely, sucking the prey in.[13][64][65]

    The diet of an individual within a species may change with age, sex, and season, and may also differ between populations. In many species, juveniles are generally carnivorous but become more herbivorous as adults.[13][66] With Barbour’s map turtle, the larger female mainly eats mollusks while the male usually eats arthropods.[13] Blanding’s turtle may feed mainly on snails or crayfish depending on the population. The European pond turtle has been recorded as being mostly carnivorous much of the year but switching to water lilies during the summer.[67] Some species have developed specialized diets such as the hawksbill, which eats sponges, the leatherback, which feeds on jellyfish, and the Mekong snail-eating turtle.[26][13]

    Communication and intelligence

    Photograph of an oblong turtle
    The oblong turtle has a sizable vocal repertoire.[68]

    See also: Animal cognition

    While popularly thought of as mute, turtles make various sounds to communicate.[69][70] One study which recorded 53 species found that all of them vocalized.[71] Tortoises may bellow when courting and mating.[70][31] Various species of both freshwater and sea turtles emit short, low-frequency calls from the time they are in the egg to when they are adults. These vocalizations may serve to create group cohesion when migrating.[70] The oblong turtle has a particularly large vocal range; producing sounds described as clacks, clicks, squawks, hoots, various kinds of chirps, wails, hooos, grunts, growls, blow bursts, howls, and drum rolls.[68]

    Play behavior has been documented in some turtle species.[72] In the laboratory, Florida red-bellied cooters can learn novel tasks and have demonstrated a long-term memory of at least 7.5 months.[73] Similarly, giant tortoises can learn and remember tasks, and master lessons much faster when trained in groups.[74] Tortoises appear to be able to retain operant conditioning nine years after their initial training.[75] Studies have shown that turtles can navigate the environment using landmarks and a map-like system resulting in accurate direct routes towards a goal.[76] Navigation in turtles have been correlated to high cognition function in the medial cortex region of the brain.[76][77]

    Photo of a large bird eating a turtle
    Crested caracara eating a turtle

    Defense

    See also: Anti-predator adaptation

    When sensing danger, a turtle may flee, freeze or withdraw into its shell. Freshwater turtles flee into the water, though the Sonora mud turtle may take refuge on land as the shallow temporary ponds they inhabit make them vulnerable.[78] When startled, a softshell turtle may dive underwater and bury itself under the sea floor.[79] If a predator persists, the turtle may bite or discharge from its cloaca. Several species produce foul-smelling chemicals from musk glands. Other tactics include threat displays and Bell’s hinge-back tortoise can play dead. When attacked, big-headed turtle hatchlings squeal, possibly startling the predator.[80]

    Migration

    Further information: Sea turtle migration

    An olive ridley sea turtle nesting on Escobilla Beach, OaxacaMexico. Female sea turtles migrate long distances to nest on favored beaches.

    Turtles are the only reptiles that migrate long distances, more specifically the marine species that can travel up to thousands of kilometers. Some non-marine turtles, such as the species of Geochelone (terrestrial), Chelydra (freshwater), and Malaclemys (estuarine), migrate seasonally over much shorter distances, up to around 27 km (17 mi), to lay eggs. Such short migrations are comparable to those of some lizards, snakes, and crocodilians.[81] Sea turtles nest in a specific area, such as a beach, leaving the eggs to hatch unattended. The young turtles leave that area, migrating long distances in the years or decades in which they grow to maturity, and then return seemingly to the same area every few years to mate and lay eggs, though the precision varies between species and populations. This “natal homing” has appeared remarkable to biologists, though there is now plentiful evidence for it, including from genetics.[82]

    How sea turtles navigate to their breeding beaches remains unknown. One possibility is imprinting as in salmon, where the young learn the chemical signature, effectively the scent, of their home waters before leaving, and remember that when the time comes for them to return as adults. Another possible cue is the orientation of the Earth’s magnetic field at the natal beach. There is experimental evidence that turtles have an effective magnetic sense, and that they use this in navigation. Proof that homing occurs is derived from genetic analysis of populations of loggerheads, hawksbills, leatherbacks, and olive ridleys by nesting place. For each of these species, the populations in different places have their own mitochondrial DNA genetic signatures that persist over the years. This shows that the populations are distinct and that homing must be occurring reliably.[82]

    Reproduction and life cycle

    Frames from a film showing one desert tortoise biting the other desert tortoise
    Desert tortoises fighting

    Turtles have a wide variety of mating behaviors but do not form pair-bonds or social groups.[83] In terrestrial species, males are often larger than females and fighting between males establishes a dominance hierarchy for access to mates. For most semi-aquatic and bottom-walking aquatic species, combat occurs less often. Males of these species instead may use their size advantage to mate forcibly. In fully aquatic species, males are often smaller than females and rely on courtship displays to gain mating access to females.[84] In green sea turtles, females generally outnumber males.[85]

    Courtship and mounting

    Courtship varies between species, and with habitat. It is often complex in aquatic species, both marine and freshwater, but simpler in the semi-aquatic mud turtles and snapping turtles. A male tortoise bobs his head, then subdues the female by biting and butting her before mounting.[13] The male scorpion mud turtle approaches the female from the rear, and often resorts to aggressive methods such as biting the female’s tail or hind limbs, followed by a mounting.[86]

    Female choice is important in some species, and female green sea turtles are not always receptive. As such, they have evolved behaviors to avoid the male’s attempts at copulation, such as swimming away, confronting the male followed by biting or taking up a refusal position with her body vertical, her limbs widely outspread, and her plastron facing the male. If the water is too shallow for the refusal position, the females resort to beaching themselves, as the males do not follow them ashore.[85]

    Photograph of a male turtle mounting a female
    Mounting behavior in the three-toed box turtle

    All turtles fertilize internally; mounting and copulation can be difficult. In many species, males have a concave plastron that interlocks with the female’s carapace. In species like the Russian tortoise, the male has a lighter shell and longer legs. The high, rounded shape of box turtles are particular obstacles for mounting. The male eastern box turtle leans backward and hooks onto the back of the female’s plastron.[87] Aquatic turtles mount in water,[88][89] and female sea turtles support the mounting male while swimming and diving.[90] During copulation, the male turtle aligns his tail with the female’s so he can insert his penis into her cloaca.[91] Some female turtles can store sperm from multiple males and their egg clutches can have multiple sires.[92][83]

    Eggs and hatchlings

    Land turtle laying an egg in a hole
    A female common snapping turtle depositing her eggs in a hole she dug

    Turtles, including sea turtles, lay their eggs on land, although some lay eggs near water that rises and falls in level, submerging the eggs. While most species build nests and lay eggs where they forage, some travel miles. The common snapping turtle walks 5 km (3 mi) on land, while sea turtles travel even further; the leatherback swims some 12,000 km (7,500 mi) to its nesting beaches.[13][89] Most turtles create a nest for their eggs. Females usually dig a flask-like chamber in the substrate. Other species lay their eggs in vegetation or crevices.[93] Females choose nesting locations based on environmental factors such as temperature and humidity, which are important for developing embryos.[89] Depending on the species, the number of eggs laid varies from one to over 100. Larger females can lay eggs that are greater in number or bigger in size. Compared to freshwater turtles, tortoises deposit fewer but larger eggs. Females can lay multiple clutches throughout a season, particularly in species that experience unpredictable monsoons.[94]

    Tortoise hatching from egg
    Marginated tortoise emerges from its egg

    Most mother turtles do no more in the way of parental care than covering their eggs and immediately leaving, though some species guard their nests for days or weeks.[95] Eggs vary between rounded, oval, elongated, and between hard- and soft-shelled.[96] Most species have their sex determined by temperature. In some species, higher temperatures produce females and lower ones produce males, while in others, milder temperatures produce males and both hot and cold extremes produce females.[13] There is experimental evidence that the embryos of Mauremys reevesii can move around inside their eggs to select the best temperature for development, thus influencing their sexual destiny.[97] In other species, sex is determined genetically. The length of incubation for turtle eggs varies from two to three months for temperate species, and four months to over a year for tropical species.[13] Species that live in warm temperate climates can delay their development.[98]

    Hatching young turtles break out of the shell using an egg tooth, a sharp projection that exists temporarily on their upper beak.[13][99] Hatchlings dig themselves out of the nest and find safety in vegetation or water. Some species stay in the nest for longer, be it for overwintering or to wait for the rain to loosen the soil for them to dig out.[13] Young turtles are highly vulnerable to predators, both in the egg and as hatchlings. Mortality is high during this period but significantly decreases when they reach adulthood. Most species grow quickly during their early years and slow down when they mature.[100]

    Lifespan

    Turtles can live long lives. The oldest living turtle and land animal is said to be a Seychelles giant tortoise named Jonathan, who turned 187 in 2019.[101] A Galápagos tortoise named Harriet was collected by Charles Darwin in 1835; it died in 2006, having lived for at least 176 years. Most wild turtles do not reach that age. Turtles keep growing new scutes under the previous scutes every year, allowing researchers to estimate how long they have lived.[102] They also age slowly.[103] The survival rate for adult turtles can reach 99% per year.[13]

    Systematics and evolution

    Further information: Turtle classification and List of Testudines families

    Fossil history

    Diagram of evolution of turtle shells showing four fossil species
    Diagram of the origins of the turtle body plan through the Triassic: isolated bony plates evolved to form a complete shell, in a sequence involving PappochelysEorhynchochelysOdontochelys, and Proganochelys.[19]

    Zoologists have sought to explain the evolutionary origin of the turtles, and in particular of their unique shells. In 1914, Jan Versluys proposed that bony plates in the dermis, called osteoderms, fused to the ribs beneath them, later called the “Polka Dot Ancestor” by Olivier Rieppel.[19][104] The theory accounted for the evolution of fossil pareiasaurs from Bradysaurus to Anthodon, but not for how the ribs could have become attached to the bony dermal plates.[19]

    More recent discoveries have painted a different scenario for the evolution of the turtle’s shell. The stem-turtles Eunotosaurus of the Middle PermianPappochelys of the Middle Triassic, and Eorhynchochelys of the Late Triassic lacked carapaces and plastrons but had shortened torsos, expanded ribs, and lengthened dorsal vertebrae. Also in the Late Triassic, Odontochelys had a partial shell consisting of a complete bony plastron and an incomplete carapace. The development of a shell reached completion with the Late Triassic Proganochelys, with its fully developed carapace and plastron.[19][105] Adaptations that led to the evolution of the shell may have originally been for digging and a fossorial lifestyle.[105]

    The oldest known members of the Pleurodira lineage are the Platychelyidae, from the Late Jurassic.[106] The oldest known unambiguous cryptodire is Sinaspideretes, a close relative of softshell turtles, from the Late Jurassic of China.[107] Turtles became highly diverse during the Cretaceous, as climatic conditions in this period were favourable for their global dispersal.[108] During the Late Cretaceous and Cenozoic, members of the pleurodire families Bothremydidae and Podocnemididae became widely distributed in the Northern Hemisphere due to their coastal habits.[109][110] The oldest known soft-shelled turtles and sea turtles appeared during the Early Cretaceous.[111][112] Tortoises originated in Asia during the Eocene.[113] A late surviving group of stem-turtles, the Meiolaniidae, survived in Australasia into the Pleistocene and Holocene.[114]

    External relationships

    The turtles’ exact ancestry has been disputed. It was believed they were the only surviving branch of the ancient evolutionary grade Anapsida, which includes groups such as procolophonids and pareiasaurs. All anapsid skulls lack a temporal opening while all other living amniotes have temporal openings.[115] It was later suggested that the anapsid-like turtle skulls may be due to backward evolution rather than to anapsid descent.[116] Fossil evidence has shown that early stem-turtles possessed small temporal openings.[105]

    Some early morphological phylogenetic studies have placed turtles closer to Lepidosauria (tuataraslizards, and snakes) than to Archosauria (crocodilians and birds).[115] By contrast, several molecular studies place turtles either within Archosauria,[117] or, more commonly, as a sister group to extant archosaurs,[116][118][119][120] though an analysis conducted by Tyler Lyson and colleagues (2012) recovered turtles as the sister group of lepidosaurs instead.[121] Ylenia Chiari and colleagues (2012) analyzed 248 nuclear genes from 16 vertebrates and suggested that turtles share a more recent common ancestor with birds and crocodilians. The date of separation of turtles and birds and crocodilians was estimated to be 255 million years ago during the Permian.[122] Through genomic-scale phylogenetic study of ultra-conserved elements (UCEs) to clarify the placement of turtles within reptiles, Nicholas Crawford and colleagues (2012) similarly found that turtles are closer to birds and crocodilians.[123]

    Using the draft (unfinished) genome sequences of the green sea turtle and the Chinese softshell turtle, Zhuo Wang and colleagues (2013) concluded that turtles are likely a sister group of crocodilians and birds.[124] The external phylogeny of the turtles is shown in the cladogram below.[123]

    DiapsidaLepidosauromorphaSquamata (lizards, snakes) ArchosauromorphaTestudines Crocodilia (crocodiles, alligators) Aves (birds) 

    Internal relationships

    Modern turtles and their extinct relatives with a complete shell are classified within the clade Testudinata.[125] The most recent common ancestor of living turtles, corresponding to the split between Pleurodira (side-necked species) and Cryptodira (hidden necked species), is estimated to have occurred around 210 million years ago during the Late Triassic.[126] Robert Thompson and colleagues (2021) comment that living turtles have low diversity, relative to how long they existed. Diversity has been stable, according to their analysis, except for a single rapid increase around the Eocene-Oligocene boundary some 30 million years ago, and a large regional extinction at roughly the same time. They suggest that global climate change caused both events, as the cooling and drying caused the land to become arid and turtles to become extinct there, while new continental margins opened up by the climate change provided habitats for other species to evolve.[127]

    The cladogram, from Nicholas Crawford and colleagues 2015, shows the internal phylogeny of the Testudines down to the level of families.[128][129] The analysis by Thompson and colleagues in 2021 supports the same structure down to the family level.[127]

    TestudinesPleurodiraChelidaePelomedusidaePodocnemididae (Side‑necked turtles) CryptodiraTrionychiaCarettochelyidae (Pig‑nosed turtle) Trionychidae (Softshell turtles) TestudinoideaEmydidae (Terrapins) PlatysternidaeGeoemydidaeTestudinidae (Tortoises) ChelonioideaCheloniidae Dermochelyidae  (Leatherback)  (Sea turtles) ChelydroideaChelydridae (Snapping turtles) DermatemydidaeKinosternidae (Hardshell turtles)  (Hidden‑necked turtles) 

    Differences between the two suborders

    Neck retraction

    Photograph of a cryptodiran with its head pulled back straight into its shell

    Cryptodira retract their necks backward.

    Photograph of a pleurodiran with its head and neck folded toward the side

    Pleurodira retract their necks sideways.

    Diagrams of the top-down bending of the neck of cryptodirans, and the left-right bending of the neck in pleurodirans

    The different mechanisms of neck retraction in the two suborders of turtles

    Turtles are divided into two living suborders: Cryptodira and Pleurodira.[130] The two groups differ in the way the neck is retracted for protection. Pleurodirans retract their neck to the side and in front of the shoulder girdles, whereas cryptodirans retract their neck backward into their shell. These motions are enabled by the morphology and arrangement of neck vertebrae.[131][132] Sea turtles (which belong to Cryptodira) have mostly lost the ability to retract their heads.[133]

    The adductor muscles in the lower jaw create a pulley-like system in both subgroups. However, the bones that the muscles articulate with differ. In Pleurodira, the pulley is formed with the pterygoid bones of the palate, but in Cryptodira the pulley is formed with the otic capsule. Both systems help to vertically redirect the adductor muscles and maintain a powerful bite.[134]

    A further difference between the suborders is the attachment of the pelvis. In Cryptodira, the pelvis is free, linked to the shell only by ligaments. In Pleurodira, the pelvis is sutured, joined with bony connections, to the carapace and to the plastron, creating a pair of large columns of bone at the back end of the turtle, linking the two parts of the shell.[135]

    Distribution and habitat

    Turtles are widely distributed across the world’s continents, oceans, and islands with terrestrial, fully aquatic, and semi-aquatic species. Sea turtles are mainly tropical and subtropical, but leatherbacks can be found in colder areas of the Atlantic and Pacific.[136] Living Pleurodira all live in freshwater and are found only in the Southern Hemisphere.[137] The Cryptodira include terrestrial, freshwater, and marine species, and these range more widely.[136] The world regions richest in non-marine turtle species are the Amazon basin, the Gulf of Mexico drainages of the United States, and parts of South and Southeast Asia.[138]

    For turtles in colder climates, their distribution is limited by constraints on reproduction, which is reduced by long hibernations. North American species barely range above the southern Canadian border.[139] Some turtles are found at high altitudes, for example, the species Terrapene ornata occurs up to 2,000 m (6,600 ft) in New Mexico.[140] Conversely, the leatherback sea turtle can dive over 1,200 m (3,900 ft).[141] Species of the genus Gopherus can tolerate both below freezing and over 40 °C (104 °F) in body temperature, though they are most active at 26–34 °C (79–93 °F).[142]

    Conservation

    Photograph of a marine turtle escaping from a specially-designed fishing net
    Many turtles have been killed accidentally in fishing nets.[143] Some trawlers now use nets fitted with turtle excluders.[144] Seen here, a loggerhead escapes a net so fitted.

    Among vertebrate orders, turtles are second only to primates in the percentage of threatened species. 360 modern species have existed since 1500 AD. Of these, 51–56% are considered threatened and 60% considered threatened or extinct.[145] Turtles face many threats, including habitat destruction, harvesting for consumption, the pet trade,[146][147] light pollution,[148] and climate change.[149] Asian species have a particularly high extinction risk, primarily due to their long-term unsustainable exploitation for food and medicine,[150] and about 83% of Asia’s non-marine turtle species are considered threatened.[145] As of 2021, turtle extinction is progressing much faster than during the Cretaceous-Tertiary extinction. At this rate, all turtles could be extinct in a few centuries.[151]

    Turtle hatcheries can be set up when protection against flooding, erosion, predation, or heavy poaching is required.[152][153][154] Chinese markets have sought to satisfy an increasing demand for turtle meat with farmed turtles. In 2007 it was estimated that over a thousand turtle farms operated in China.[155] All the same, wild turtles continue to be caught and sent to market in large numbers, resulting in what conservationists have called “the Asian turtle crisis”.[156][150] In the words of the biologist George Amato, the hunting of turtles “vacuumed up entire species from areas in Southeast Asia”, even as biologists still did not know how many species lived in the region.[157] In 2000, all the Asian box turtles were placed on the CITES list of endangered species.[150]

    Harvesting wild turtles is legal in some American states,[158] and there has been a growing demand for American turtles in China.[159][160] The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission estimated in 2008 that around 3,000 pounds of softshell turtles were exported weekly via Tampa International Airport.[160] However, the great majority of turtles exported from the US between 2002 and 2005 were farmed.[159]

    Large numbers of sea turtles are accidentally killed in longlinesgillnets, and trawling nets as bycatch. A 2010 study suggested that over 8 million had been killed between 1990 and 2008; the Eastern Pacific and the Mediterranean were identified as among the areas worst affected.[143] Since the 1980s, the United States has required all shrimp trawlers to fit their nets with turtle excluder devices that prevent turtles from being entangled in the net and drowning.[144] More locally, other human activities are affecting marine turtles. In Australia, Queensland‘s shark culling program, which uses shark nets and drum lines, has killed over 5,000 turtles as bycatch between 1962 and 2015; including 719 loggerhead turtles and 33 hawksbill sea turtles, which are listed as critically endangered.[161]

    Native turtle populations can also be threatened by invasive ones. The central North American red-eared slider turtle has been listed among the “world’s worst invasive species“, pet turtle having been released globally. They appear to compete with native turtle species in eastern and western North America, Europe, and Japan.[162][163]

    Human uses

    On space flights

    Two tortoises were on the Soviet Union’s September 1968 Zond 5 circumlunar flight, making them the first earthly living things to travel to the vicinity of the Moon. Turtles were also on the Zond 6 (1968) and the Zond 7 (1969) circumlunar flights.[164][165]

    In culture

    Main article: Cultural depictions of turtles

    Further information: World Turtle

    Turtles have featured in human cultures across the world since ancient times. They are generally viewed positively despite not being “cuddly” or flashy; their association with the ancient times and old age have contributed to their endearing image.[166]

    In Hindu mythology, the World Turtle, named Kurma or Kacchapa, supports four elephants on his back; they, in turn, carry the weight of the whole world on their backs.[167][168] The turtle is one of the ten avatars or incarnations of the god Vishnu.[167] The yoga pose Kurmasana is named for the avatar.[169][170] World Turtles are found in Native American cultures including the AlgonquianIroquois, and Lenape. They tell many versions of the creation story of Turtle Island. One version has Muskrat pile up earth on Turtle’s back, creating the continent of North America. An Iroquois version has the pregnant Sky Woman fall through a hole in the sky between a tree’s roots, where she is caught by birds who land her safely on Turtle’s back; the Earth grows around her. The turtle here is altruistic, but the world is a heavy burden, and the turtle sometimes shakes itself to relieve the load, causing earthquakes.[167][171][172]

    A turtle was the symbol of the Ancient Mesopotamian god Enki from the 3rd millennium BCE onward.[173] An ancient Greek origin myth told that only the tortoise refused the invitation of the gods Zeus and Hera to their wedding, as it preferred to stay at home. Zeus then ordered it to carry its house with it, ever after.[174] Another of their gods, Hermes, invented a seven-stringed lyre made with the shell of a tortoise.[175] In the Shang dynasty Chinese practice of plastromancy, dating back to 1200 BCE, oracles were obtained by inscribing questions on turtle plastrons using the oldest known form of Chinese characters, burning the plastron, and interpreting the resulting cracks. Later, the turtle was one of the four sacred animals in Confucianism, while in the Han periodsteles were mounted on top of stone turtles, later linked with Bixi, the turtle-shelled son of the Dragon King.[176] Marine turtles feature significantly in Australian Aboriginal art.[168] The army of Ancient Rome used the testudo (“tortoise”) formation where soldiers would form a shield wall for protection.[163]

    In Aesop’s Fables, “The Tortoise and the Hare” tells how an unequal race may be won by the slower partner.[177][178] Lewis Carroll‘s 1865 Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland features a Mock Turtle, named for a soup meant to imitate the expensive soup made from real turtle meat.[179][180][181] In 1896, the French playwright Léon Gandillot wrote a comedy in three acts named La Tortue that was “a Parisian sensation”[182] in its run in France, and came to the Manhattan Theatre, Broadway, New York, in 1898 as The Turtle.[183] A “cosmic turtle” and the island motif reappear in Gary Snyder‘s 1974 novel Turtle Island, and again in Terry Pratchett‘s Discworld series as Great A’Tuin, starting with the 1983 novel The Colour of Magic. It is supposedly of the species Chelys galactica, the galactic turtle, complete with four elephants on its back to support Discworld.[184] A giant fire-breathing turtle called Gamera is the star of a series of Japanese monster movies in the kaiju genre and has had twelve films from 1965 to 2006.[185] Turtles have been featured in comic books and animations such as the 1984 Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles.[186][187]

    As pets

    Some turtles, particularly small terrestrial and freshwater species, are kept as pets.[188][189] The demand for pet turtles increased in the 1950s, with the US being the main supplier, particularly of farm-bred red-eared sliders. The popularity for exotic pets has led to an increase in illegal wildlife trafficking. Around 21% of the value of live animal trade is in reptiles, and turtles are among the more popularly traded species.[190] Poor husbandry of tortoises can cause chronic rhinitis (nasal swelling), overgrown beaks, hyperparathyroidism (which softens their skeleton), constipation, various reproductive problems, and injuries from dogs.[188] In the early 20th century, people in the United States have organized and gambled on turtle races.[191]

    As food and other uses

    The flesh of captured wild turtles continues to be eaten in Asian cultures,[192] while turtle soup was once a popular dish in English cuisine.[193] Gopher tortoise stew has been popular with some groups in Florida.[194] The supposed aphrodisiac or medicinal properties of turtle eggs created a large trade for them in Southeast Asia.[168] Hard-shell turtle plastrons and soft-shell carapaces are widely used in traditional Chinese medicineTaiwan imported nearly 200 metric tons of hard-shells from its neighbors yearly from 1999 to 2008.[195] A popular medicinal preparation based on herbs and turtle shells is guilinggao jelly.[196] The substance tortoiseshell, usually from the hawksbill turtle, has been used for centuries to make jewelry, tools, and ornaments around the Western Pacific.[168] Hawksbills have accordingly been hunted for their shells.[197] The trading of tortoiseshell was internationally banned in 1977 by CITES.[198] Some cultures have used turtle shells to make music: Native American shamans made them into ceremonial rattles, while AztecsMayas, and Mixtecs made ayotl drums

  • Amazon rainforest

    The Amazon rainforest,[a] also called Amazon jungle or Amazonia, is a moist broadleaf tropical rainforest in the Amazon biome that covers most of the Amazon basin of South America. This basin encompasses 7,000,000 km2 (2,700,000 sq mi),[2] of which 6,000,000 km2 (2,300,000 sq mi) are covered by the rainforest.[3] This region includes territory belonging to nine nations and 3,344 indigenous territories.

    The majority of the forest, 60%, is in Brazil, followed by Peru with 13%, Colombia with 10%, and with minor amounts in BoliviaEcuadorFrench GuianaGuyanaSuriname, and Venezuela. Four nations have “Amazonas” as the name of one of their first-level administrative regions, and France uses the name “Guiana Amazonian Park” for French Guiana’s protected rainforest area. The Amazon represents over half of the total area of remaining rainforests on Earth,[4] and comprises the largest and most biodiverse tract of tropical rainforest in the world, with an estimated 390 billion individual trees in about 16,000 species.[5]

    More than 30 million people of 350 different ethnic groups live in the Amazon, which are subdivided into 9 different national political systems and 3,344 formally acknowledged indigenous territories. Indigenous peoples make up 9% of the total population, and 60 of the groups remain largely isolated.[6]

    Large scale deforestation is occurring in the forest, creating different harmful effects. Economic losses due to deforestation in Brazil could be approximately 7 times higher in comparison to the cost of all commodities produced through deforestation. In 2023, the World Bank published a report proposing a non-deforestation based economic program in the region.[7][8]

    Etymology

    The name Amazon is said to arise from a war Francisco de Orellana fought with the Tapuyas and other tribes. The women of the tribe fought alongside the men, as was their custom.[9] Orellana derived the name Amazonas from the Amazons of Greek mythology, described by Herodotus and Diodorus.[9]

    History

    See also: History of South America § Amazon, and Amazon River § History

    Bates‘s 1863 The Naturalist on the River Amazons
    Manaus, with 2.2 million inhabitants, is the largest city in the Amazon basin
    The Yanomami are a group of approximately 32,000 indigenous people who live in the Amazon rainforest.[10]
    Members of an uncontacted tribe encountered in the Brazilian state of Acre in 2009
    Ribeirinhos dwellings. Ribeirinhos are a traditional rural non-indigenous[b] population in the Amazon rainforest, who live near rivers

    Based on archaeological evidence from an excavation at Caverna da Pedra Pintada, human inhabitants first settled in the Amazon region at least 11,200 years ago.[11] Subsequent development led to late-prehistoric settlements along the periphery of the forest by AD 1250, which induced alterations in the forest cover.[12]

    For a long time, it was thought that the Amazon rainforest was never more than sparsely populated, as it was impossible to sustain a large population through agriculture given the poor soil. Archeologist Betty Meggers was a prominent proponent of this idea, as described in her book Amazonia: Man and Culture in a Counterfeit Paradise. She claimed that a population density of 0.2 inhabitants per square kilometre (0.52/sq mi) is the maximum that can be sustained in the rainforest through hunting, with agriculture needed to host a larger population.[13] However, recent anthropological findings have suggested that the region was actually densely populated.[14] The Upano Valley sites in present-day eastern Ecuador predate all known complex Amazonian societies.[15]

    Some 5 million people may have lived in the Amazon region in AD 1500, divided between dense coastal settlements, such as that at Marajó, and inland dwellers.[16] Based on projections of food production, one estimate suggests over 8 million people living in the Amazon in 1492.[17] By 1900, the native indigenous population had fallen to 1 million and by the early 1980s it was less than 200,000.[16]

    The first European to travel the length of the Amazon River was Francisco de Orellana in 1542.[18] The BBC’s Unnatural Histories presents evidence that Orellana, rather than exaggerating his claims as previously thought, was correct in his observations that a complex civilization was flourishing along the Amazon in the 1540s. The Pre-Columbian agriculture in the Amazon Basin was sufficiently advanced to support prosperous and populous societies. It is believed that civilization was later devastated by the spread of diseases from Europe, such as smallpox.[19] This civilization was investigated by the British explorer Percy Fawcett in the early twentieth century. The results of his expeditions were inconclusive, and he disappeared mysteriously on his last trip. His name for this lost civilization was the City of Z.[citation needed]

    Since the 1970s, numerous geoglyphs have been discovered on deforested land dating between AD 1–1250, furthering claims about Pre-Columbian civilizations.[20][21] Ondemar Dias is accredited with first discovering the geoglyphs in 1977, and Alceu Ranzi is credited with furthering their discovery after flying over Acre.[19][22] The BBC’s Unnatural Histories presented evidence that the Amazon rainforest, rather than being a pristine wilderness, has been shaped by man for at least 11,000 years through practices such as forest gardening and terra preta.[19] Terra preta is found over large areas in the Amazon forest; and is now widely accepted as a product of indigenous soil management. The development of this fertile soil allowed agriculture and silviculture in the previously hostile environment; meaning that large portions of the Amazon rainforest are probably the result of centuries of human management, rather than naturally occurring as has previously been supposed.[23] In the region of the Xingu tribe, remains of some of these large settlements in the middle of the Amazon forest were found in 2003 by Michael Heckenberger and colleagues of the University of Florida. Among those were evidence of roads, bridges and large plazas.[24]

    In the Amazonas, there has been fighting and wars between the neighboring tribes of the Jivaro. Several tribes of the Jivaroan group, including the Shuar, practised headhunting for trophies and headshrinking.[25] The accounts of missionaries to the area in the borderlands between Brazil and Venezuela have recounted constant infighting in the Yanomami tribes. More than a third of the Yanomamo males, on average, died from warfare.[26][when?]

    The Munduruku were a warlike tribe that expanded along the Tapajós river and its tributaries and were feared by neighboring tribes. In the early 19th century, the Munduruku were pacified and subjugated by the Brazilians.[27]

    During the Amazon rubber boom it is estimated that diseases brought by immigrants, such as typhus and malaria, killed 40,000 native Amazonians.[28]

    In the 1950s, Brazilian explorer and defender of indigenous people, Cândido Rondon, supported the Villas-Bôas brothers‘ campaign, which faced strong opposition from the government and the ranchers of Mato Grosso and led to the establishment of the first Brazilian National Park for indigenous people along the Xingu River in 1961.[29]

    In 1961, British explorer Richard Mason was killed by an uncontacted Amazon tribe known as the Panará.[30]

    The Matsés made their first permanent contact with the outside world in 1969. Before that date, they were effectively at-war with the Peruvian government.[31]

    Geography

    Location

    Nine countries share the Amazon basin—most of the rainforest, 58.4%, is contained within the borders of Brazil. The other eight countries are Peru with 12.8%, Bolivia with 7.7%, Colombia with 7.1%, Venezuela with 6.1%, Guyana with 3.1%, Suriname with 2.5%, French Guiana with 1.4% and Ecuador with 1%.[32]

    Natural

    Amazon rainforest in Colombia
    Aerial view of the Amazon rainforest, near Manaus

    The rainforest likely formed during the Eocene era (from 56 million years to 33.9 million years ago). It appeared following a global reduction of tropical temperatures when the Atlantic Ocean had widened sufficiently to provide a warm, moist climate to the Amazon basin. The rainforest has been in existence for at least 55 million years, and most of the region remained free of savanna-type biomes at least until the current ice age when the climate was drier and savanna more widespread.[33][34]

    Following the Cretaceous–Paleogene extinction event, the extinction of the dinosaurs and the wetter climate may have allowed the tropical rainforest to spread out across the continent. From 66 to 34 Mya, the rainforest extended as far south as 45°. Climate fluctuations during the last 34 million years have allowed savanna regions to expand into the tropics. During the Oligocene, for example, the rainforest spanned a relatively narrow band. It expanded again during the Middle Miocene, then retracted to a mostly inland formation at the last glacial maximum.[35] However, the rainforest still managed to thrive during these glacial periods, allowing for the survival and evolution of a broad diversity of species.[36]

    Aerial view of the Amazon rainforest

    During the mid-Eocene, it is believed that the drainage basin of the Amazon was split along the middle of the continent by the Purus Arch. Water on the eastern side flowed toward the Atlantic, while to the west water flowed toward the Pacific across the Amazonas Basin. As the Andes Mountains rose, however, a large basin was created that enclosed a lake; now known as the Solimões Basin. Within the last 5–10 million years, this accumulating water broke through the Purus Arch, joining the easterly flow toward the Atlantic.[37][38]

    Aerial view of the Amazon rainforest near Manaus

    There is evidence that there have been significant changes in the Amazon rainforest vegetation over the last 21,000 years through the last glacial maximum (LGM) and subsequent deglaciation. Analyses of sediment deposits from Amazon basin paleolakes and the Amazon Fan indicate that rainfall in the basin during the LGM was lower than for the present, and this was almost certainly associated with reduced moist tropical vegetation cover in the basin.[39] In present day, the Amazon receives approximately 9 feet of rainfall annually. There is a debate, however, over how extensive this reduction was. Some scientists argue that the rainforest was reduced to small, isolated refugia separated by open forest and grassland;[40] other scientists argue that the rainforest remained largely intact but extended less far to the north, south, and east than is seen today.[41] This debate has proved difficult to resolve because the practical limitations of working in the rainforest mean that data sampling is biased away from the center of the Amazon basin, and both explanations are reasonably well supported by the available data.

    Sahara Desert dust windblown to the Amazon

    More than 56% of the dust fertilizing the Amazon rainforest comes from the Bodélé depression in Northern Chad in the Sahara desert. The dust contains phosphorus, important for plant growth. The yearly Sahara dust replaces the equivalent amount of phosphorus washed away yearly in Amazon soil from rains and floods.[42]

    NASA’s CALIPSO satellite has measured the amount of dust transported by wind from the Sahara to the Amazon: an average of 182 million tons of dust are windblown out of the Sahara each year (some dust falls into the Atlantic), 15% of which of falls over the Amazon basin (22 million tons of it consisting of phosphorus).[43]

    CALIPSO uses a laser range finder to scan the Earth’s atmosphere for the vertical distribution of dust and other aerosols. and regularly tracks the Sahara-Amazon dust plume. CALIPSO has measured variations in the dust amounts transported – an 86 percent drop between the highest amount of dust transported in 2007 and the lowest in 2011. This is possibly causing by rainfall variations is the Sahel, a strip of semi-arid land on the southern border of the Sahara..[44]

    Amazon phosphorus also comes as smoke due to biomass burning in Africa.[45][46]

    Biodiversity, flora and fauna

    See also: List of plants of Amazon Rainforest vegetation of Brazil and Amazonian manatee

    Deforestation in the Amazon rainforest threatens many species of tree frogs, which are very sensitive to environmental changes (pictured: giant leaf frog)
    A giant, bundled liana in western Brazil

    Wet tropical forests are the most species-rich biome, and tropical forests in the Americas are consistently more species rich than the wet forests in Africa and Asia.[47] As the largest tract of tropical rainforest in the Americas, the Amazonian rainforests have unparalleled biodiversity. One in ten known species in the world lives in the Amazon rainforest.[48] This constitutes the largest collection of living plants and animal species in the world.[49]

    The region is home to about 2.5 million insect species,[50] tens of thousands of plants, and some 2,000 birds and mammals. To date, at least 40,000 plant species,[51] 2,200 fishes,[52] 1,294 birds, 427 mammals, 428 amphibians, and 378 reptiles have been scientifically classified in the region.[53] One in five of all bird species are found in the Amazon rainforest, and one in five of the fish species live in Amazonian rivers and streams. Scientists have described between 96,660 and 128,843 invertebrate species in Brazil alone.[54]

    The biodiversity of plant species is the highest on Earth with one 2001 study finding a quarter square kilometer (62 acres) of Ecuadorian rainforest supports more than 1,100 tree species.[55] A study in 1999 found one square kilometer (247 acres) of Amazon rainforest can contain about 90,790 tonnes of living plants. The average plant biomass is estimated at 356 ± 47 tonnes per hectare.[56] To date, an estimated 438,000 species of plants of economic and social interest have been registered in the region with many more remaining to be discovered or catalogued.[57] The total number of tree species in the region is estimated at 16,000.[5]

    The green leaf area of plants and trees in the rainforest varies by about 25% as a result of seasonal changes. Leaves expand during the dry season when sunlight is at a maximum, then undergo abscission in the cloudy wet season. These changes provide a balance of carbon between photosynthesis and respiration.[58]

    Each hectare of the Amazon rainforest contains around 1 billion of invertebrates. The amount of species per hectare in the Amazon rainforest can be presented in the next table:[59]

    Type of organismNumber of species per hectare
    Birds160
    Trees310
    Epiphytes96
    Reptile22
    Amphibians33
    Fish44
    Primates10

    The rainforest contains several species that can pose a hazard. Among the largest predatory creatures are the black caimanjaguarcougar, and anaconda. In the river, electric eels can produce an electric shock that can stun or kill, while piranha are known to bite and injure humans.[60] Various species of poison dart frogs secrete lipophilic alkaloid toxins through their flesh. There are also numerous parasites and disease vectors. Vampire bats dwell in the rainforest and can spread the rabies virus.[61] Malariayellow fever and dengue fever can also be contracted in the Amazon region.

    The biodiversity in the Amazon is becoming increasingly threatened, primarily by habitat loss from deforestation as well as increased frequency of fires. Over 90% of Amazonian plant and vertebrate species (13,000–14,000 in total) may have been impacted to some degree by fires.[62]

    Deforestation

    Main article: Deforestation of the Amazon rainforest

    See also: Trans-Amazonian Highway and Trans-Amazonian Railway

    Timelapse of the deforestation 1984–2018 (bottom right)

    Deforestation in the Maranhão state of Brazil, 2016

    Wildfires in Brazil’s indigenous territory, 2017

    Home to much of the Amazon rainforest, Brazil’s tropical primary (old-growth) forest loss greatly exceeds that of other countries.[63]
    Overall, 20% of the Amazon rainforest has been “transformed” (deforested) and another 6% has been “highly degraded”, causing Amazon Watch to warn that the Amazonia is in the midst of a tipping point crisis.[64]

    Deforestation is the conversion of forested areas to non-forested areas. The main sources of deforestation in the Amazon are human settlement and the development of the land.[65] In 2022, about 20% of the Amazon rainforest has already been deforested and a further 6% was “highly degraded”.[66] Research suggests that upon reaching about 20–25% (hence 0–5% more), the tipping point to flip it into a non-forest ecosystem – degraded savannah – (in eastern, southern and central Amazonia) will be reached.[67][68][69] This process of savanisation would take decades to take full effect.[66]

    Prior to the early 1960s, access to the forest’s interior was highly restricted, and the forest remained basically intact.[70] Farms established during the 1960s were based on crop cultivation and the slash and burn method. However, the colonists were unable to manage their fields and the crops because of the loss of soil fertility and weed invasion.[71] The soils in the Amazon are productive for just a short period of time, so farmers are constantly moving to new areas and clearing more land.[71] These farming practices led to deforestation and caused extensive environmental damage.[72] Deforestation is considerable, and areas cleared of forest are visible to the naked eye from outer space.

    In the 1970s, construction began on the Trans-Amazonian highway. This highway represented a major threat to the Amazon rainforest.[73] The highway still has not been completed, limiting the environmental damage.

    Between 1991 and 2000, the total area of forest lost in the Amazon rose from 415,000 to 587,000 km2 (160,000 to 227,000 sq mi), with most of the lost forest becoming pasture for cattle.[74] Seventy percent of formerly forested land in the Amazon, and 91% of land deforested since 1970, have been used for livestock pasture.[75][76] Currently, Brazil is the largest global producer of soybeans. New research however, conducted by Leydimere Oliveira et al., has shown that the more rainforest is logged in the Amazon, the less precipitation reaches the area and so the lower the yield per hectare becomes. So despite the popular perception, there has been no economical advantage for Brazil from logging rainforest zones and converting these to pastoral fields.[77]

    Indigenous protesters from Vale do Javari

    The needs of soy farmers have been used to justify many of the controversial transportation projects that are currently developing in the Amazon. The first two highways successfully opened up the rainforest and led to increased settlement and deforestation. The mean annual deforestation rate from 2000 to 2005 (22,392 km2 or 8,646 sq mi per year) was 18% higher than in the previous five years (19,018 km2 or 7,343 sq mi per year).[78] Although deforestation declined significantly in the Brazilian Amazon between 2004 and 2014, there has been an increase to the present day.[79]

    Brazilian mining operation in the Amazon Rainforest.

    Brazil’s President, Jair Bolsonaro, has supported the relaxation of regulations placed on agricultural land. He has used his time in office to allow for more deforestation and more exploitation of the Amazon’s rich natural resources. Deforestation reached a 15 year high in 2021.[80]

    Since the discovery of fossil fuel reservoirs in the Amazon rainforest, oil drilling activity has steadily increased, peaking in the Western Amazon in the 1970s and ushering another drilling boom in the 2000s.[81] Oil companies have to set up their operations by opening new roads through the forests, which often contributes to deforestation in the region.[82] 9.4% of the territory of the Amazon is affected by oil fields.[83]

    Mining is also a major driver of deforestation. 17% of the area of the Amazon Rainforest is affected by mining.[83]

    The transition to solar and wind energy, digitalization, raised the demand for cassiterite (the main ore of tin used also for financing gold mining), manganese and copper, which attracrted many illegal miners to the Amazon. This led to deforestation, different environmental and social problems. Hydropower also creates significant problems in the Amazon. Such activities are defined by the World Rainforest Movement as “Green extractivism“.[84][85]

    The European Union–Mercosur free trade agreement, which would form one of the world’s largest free trade areas, has been denounced by environmental activists and indigenous rights campaigners.[86] The fear is that the deal could lead to more deforestation of the Amazon rainforest as it expands market access to Brazilian beef.[87]

    According to a November 2021 report by Brazil’s INPE, based on satellite data, deforestation has increased by 22% over 2020 and is at its highest level since 2006.[88][89]

    2019 fires

    Main article: 2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires

    There were 72,843 fires in Brazil in 2019, with more than half within the Amazon region.[90][91][92] In August 2019 there were a record number of fires.[93] Deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon rose more than 88% in June 2019 compared with the same month in 2018.[94]

    • NASA satellite observation of deforestation in the Mato Grosso state of Brazil. The transformation from forest to farm is evident by the paler square shaped areas under development.
    • Fires and deforestation in the state of Rondônia
    • One consequence of forest clearing in the Amazon: thick smoke that hangs over the forest
    • Impact of deforestation on natural habitat of trees

    The increased area of fire-impacted forest coincided with a relaxation of environmental regulations from the Brazilian government. Notably, before those regulations were put in place in 2008 the fire-impacted area was also larger compared to the regulation period of 2009–2018. As these fire continue to move closer to the heart of the Amazon basin, their impact on biodiversity will only increase in scale, as the cumulative fire-impacted area is correlated with the number of species impacted.[62]

    Conservation and climate change

    See also: Deforestation and climate changeGaviotas, and Amazon Fund

    Amazon rainforest

    Environmentalists are concerned about loss of biodiversity that will result from destruction of the forest, and also about the release of the carbon contained within the vegetation, which could accelerate global warming. Amazonian evergreen forests account for about 10% of the world’s terrestrial primary productivity and 10% of the carbon stores in ecosystems[95] – of the order of 1.1 × 1011 metric tonnes of carbon.[96] Amazonian forests are estimated to have accumulated 0.62 ± 0.37 tons of carbon per hectare per year between 1975 and 1996.[96] In 2021 it was reported that the Amazon for the first time emitted more greenhouse gases than it absorbed.[97] Though often referenced as producing more than a quarter of the Earth’s oxygen, this often stated, but misused statistic actually refers to oxygen turnover. The net contribution of the ecosystem is approximately zero.[98]

    Tipping cascades in the Amazon rainforest, according to the 2023 Global Tipping Points report. Potential tipping points for the Amazon include a 3-4°C rise in global temperature and deforestation levels over 40%.[99]

    One computer model of future climate change caused by greenhouse gas emissions shows that the Amazon rainforest could become unsustainable under conditions of severely reduced rainfall and increased temperatures, leading to an almost complete loss of rainforest cover in the basin by 2100.,[100][101] and severe economic, natural capital and ecosystem services impacts of not averting the tipping point.[102] However, simulations of Amazon basin climate change across many different models are not consistent in their estimation of any rainfall response, ranging from weak increases to strong decreases.[103] The result indicates that the rainforest could be threatened through the 21st century by climate change in addition to deforestation.

    Peruvian researcher Tatiana Espinosa [es] with a Dipteryx micrantha tree in the Peruvian Amazonia

    In 1989, environmentalist C.M. Peters and two colleagues stated there is economic as well as biological incentive to protecting the rainforest. One hectare in the Peruvian Amazon has been calculated to have a value of $6820 if intact forest is sustainably harvested for fruits, latex, and timber; $1000 if clear-cut for commercial timber (not sustainably harvested); or $148 if used as cattle pasture.[104]

    A map of uncontacted tribes, around the start of the 21st century

    As indigenous territories continue to be destroyed by deforestation and ecocide (such as in the Peruvian Amazon),[105] indigenous peoples‘ rainforest communities continue to disappear, while others, like the Urarina continue to struggle to fight for their cultural survival and the fate of their forested territories. Meanwhile, the relationship between non-human primates in the subsistence and symbolism of indigenous lowland South American peoples has gained increased attention, as have ethno-biology and community-based conservation efforts.

    From 2002 to 2006, the conserved land in the Amazon rainforest almost tripled and deforestation rates dropped up to 60%. About 1,000,000 km2 (250,000,000 acres) have been put onto some sort of conservation, which adds up to a current amount of 1,730,000 km2 (430,000,000 acres).[106]

    In April 2019, the Ecuadorian court stopped oil exploration activities in 180,000 hectares (440,000 acres) of the Amazon rainforest.[107]

    In July 2019, the Ecuadorian court forbade the government to sell territory with forests to oil companies.[108]

    In September 2019, the US and Brazil agreed to promote private-sector development in the Amazon. They also pledged a $100m biodiversity conservation fund for the Amazon led by the private sector. Brazil’s foreign minister stated that opening the rainforest to economic development was the only way to protect it.[109]

    • Anthropogenic emission of greenhouse gases broken down by sector for the year 2000.
    • Aerosols over the Amazon each September for four burning seasons (2005 through 2008). The aerosol scale (yellow to dark reddish-brown) indicates the relative amount of particles that absorb sunlight.
    • Aerial roots of red mangrove on an Amazonian river.
    • Climate change disturbances of rainforests.[110]

    A 2009 study found that a 4 °C rise (above pre-industrial levels) in global temperatures by 2100 would kill 85% of the Amazon rainforest while a temperature rise of 3 °C would kill some 75% of the Amazon.[111]

    Guiana Amazonian Park in French Guiana

    A new study by an international team of environmental scientists in the Brazilian Amazon shows that protection of freshwater biodiversity can be increased by up to 600% through integrated freshwater-terrestrial planning .[112]

    Deforestation in the Amazon rainforest region has a negative impact on local climate.[113] It was one of the main causes of the severe drought of 2014–2015 in Brazil.[114][115] This is because the moisture from the forests is important to the rainfall in BrazilParaguay and Argentina. Half of the rainfall in the Amazon area is produced by the forests.[116]

    Results of a 2021 scientific synthesis indicate that, in terms of global warming, the Amazon basin with the Amazon rainforest is currently emitting more greenhouse gases than it absorbs overall. Climate change impacts and human activities in the area – mainly wildfires, current land-use and deforestation – are causing a release of forcing agents that likely result in a net warming effect.[117][110][118]

    In 2022 the supreme court of Ecuador decided that “”under no circumstances can a project be carried out that generates excessive sacrifices to the collective rights of communities and nature.” It also required the government to respect the opinion of Indigenous peoples of the Americas about different industrial projects on their land. Advocates of the decision argue that it will have consequences far beyond Ecuador. In general, ecosystems are in better shape when indigenous peoples own or manage the land.[119]

    Due to the conservation policies of Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva in the first 10 months of 2023 deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon decreased by around 50% compared to the same period in 2022. This was despite a severe drought, one of the worst on record, that exacerbated the situation. Climate change, El Nino, deforestation increases the likelihood of drought condition in the Amazon.[120]

    According to Amazon Conservation’s MAAP forest monitoring program, the deforestation rate in the Amazon from the January 1 to November 8, 2023, decreased by 56% in comparison to the same period in 2022. The main cause is the decline in deforestation rate in Brazil, due to the government’s policies, while Columbia, Peru and Bolivia also reduced deforestation.[121]

    In January 2024 published data showed a 50% decline in deforestation rate in the Amazon rainforest and 43% rise in vegetation loss in the neighbor Cerrado during the year of 2023 in comparison to 2022. Both biomes together lose 12,980 km², 18% less than in 2022.[122]

    Remote sensing

    See also: Environmental monitoringEnvironmental management system, and Unmanned aerial vehicle

    This image reveals how the forest and the atmosphere interact to create a uniform layer of “popcorn-shaped” cumulus clouds.

    The use of remotely sensed data is dramatically improving conservationists’ knowledge of the Amazon basin. Given the objectivity and lowered costs of satellite-based land cover and -change analysis, it appears likely that remote sensing technology will be an integral part of assessing the extents, locations and damage of deforestation in the basin.[123] Furthermore, remote sensing is the best and perhaps only possible way to study the Amazon on a large scale.[124]

    The use of remote sensing for the conservation of the Amazon is also being used by the indigenous tribes of the basin to protect their tribal lands from commercial interests. Using handheld GPS devices and programs like Google Earth, members of the Trio Tribe, who live in the rainforests of southern Suriname, map out their ancestral lands to help strengthen their territorial claims.[125] Currently, most tribes in the Amazon do not have clearly defined boundaries, making it easier for commercial ventures to target their territories.

    To accurately map the Amazon’s biomass and subsequent carbon-related emissions, the classification of tree growth stages within different parts of the forest is crucial. In 2006, Tatiana Kuplich organized the trees of the Amazon into four categories: mature forest, regenerating forest [less than three years], regenerating forest [between three and five years of regrowth], and regenerating forest [eleven to eighteen years of continued development].[126] The researcher used a combination of synthetic aperture radar (SAR) and Thematic Mapper (TM) to accurately place the different portions of the Amazon into one of the four classifications.

    Impact of early 21st-century Amazon droughts

    In 2005, parts of the Amazon basin experienced the worst drought in one hundred years,[127] and there were indications that 2006 may have been a second successive year of drought.[128] A 2006 article in the UK newspaper The Independent reported the Woods Hole Research Center results, showing that the forest in its present form could survive only three years of drought.[129][130] Scientists at the Brazilian National Institute of Amazonian Research argued in the article that this drought response, coupled with the effects of deforestation on regional climate, are pushing the rainforest towards a “tipping point” where it would irreversibly start to die.[131] It concluded that the forest is on the brink of[vague] being turned into savanna or desert, with catastrophic consequences for the world’s climate.[citation needed] A study published in Nature Communications in October 2020 found that about 40% of the Amazon rainforest is at risk of becoming a savanna-like ecosystem due to reduced rainfall.[132] A study published in Nature climate change provided direct empirical evidence that more than three-quarters of the Amazon rainforest has been losing resilience since the early 2000s, risking dieback with profound implications for biodiversity, carbon storage and climate change at a global scale.[133]

    According to the World Wide Fund for Nature, the combination of climate change and deforestation increases the drying effect of dead trees that fuels forest fires.[134]

    In 2010, the Amazon rainforest experienced another severe drought, in some ways more extreme than the 2005 drought. The affected region was approximately 3,000,000 km2 (1,160,000 sq mi) of rainforest, compared with 1,900,000 km2 (734,000 sq mi) in 2005. The 2010 drought had three epicenters where vegetation died off, whereas in 2005, the drought was focused on the southwestern part. The findings were published in the journal Science. In a typical year, the Amazon absorbs 1.5 gigatons of carbon dioxide; during 2005 instead 5 gigatons were released and in 2010 8 gigatons were released.[135][136] Additional severe droughts occurred in 2010, 2015, and 2016.[137]

    In 2019 Brazil’s protections of the Amazon rainforest were slashed, resulting in a severe loss of trees.[138] According to Brazil’s National Institute for Space Research (INPE), deforestation in the Brazilian Amazon rose more than 50% in the first three months of 2020 compared to the same three-month period in 2019.[139]

    In 2020, a 17 percent rise was noted in the Amazon wildfires, marking the worst start to the fire season in a decade. The first 10 days of August 2020 witnessed 10,136 fires. An analysis of the government figures reflected 81 per cent increase in fires in federal reserves, in comparison with the same period in 2019.[140] However, President Jair Bolsonaro turned down the existence of fires, calling it a “lie”, despite the data produced by his own government.[141] Satellites in September recorded 32,017 hotspots in the world’s largest rainforest, a 61% rise from the same month in 2019.[142] In addition, October saw a huge surge in the number of hotspots in the forest (more than 17,000 fires are burning in the Amazon’s rainforest) – with more than double the amount detected in the same month last year.[143]

    Possibility of forest-friendly economy

    In 2023 the World Bank, published a report named: “A Balancing Act for Brazil’s Amazonian States: An Economic Memorandum”. The report stating that economic losses due to deforestation in Brazil could reach around 317 billion dollars per year, approximately 7 times higher in comparison to the cost of all commodities produced through deforestation, proposed non-deforestation based economic program in the region of the Amazon rainforest.[7][8]

    Silvopasture integrates livestock, forage, and trees. (Photo: USDA NAC)

    Silvopasture (integrating trees, forage and grazing) can help to stop deforestation in the region.[144]

    According to WWF, ecotourism could help the Amazon to reduce deforestation and climate change. Ecotourism is currently still little practiced in the Amazon, partly due to lack of information about places where implementation is possible. Ecotourism is a sector that can also be taken up by the Indigenous community in the Amazon as a source of income and revenue. An ecotourism project in the Brazilian section of the rainforest had been under consideration by Brazil’s State Secretary for the Environment and Sustainable Development in 2009, along the Aripuanã River, in the Aripuanã Sustainable Development Reserve.[145] Also, some community-based ecotourism exists in the Mamirauá Sustainable Development Reserve.[146] Ecotourism is also practiced in the Peruvian section of the rainforest. A few ecolodges are for instance present between Cusco and Madre de Dios.[147]

    In May 2023 Brazil’s bank federation decided to implement a new sustainability standard demanding from meatpackers to ensure their meat is not coming from illegally deforested area. Credits will not be given to those who will not meet the new standards. The decision came after the European Union decides to implement regulations to stop deforestation. Brazil beef exporters, said the standard is not just because it is not applied to land owners.[148] 21 banks representing 81% of the credit market in Brazil agree to follow those rules.[149]

    According to a statement of the Colombian government deforestation rates in the Colombian Amazon fell by 70% in the first 9 months of 2023 compared to the same period in the previous year, what can be attributed to the conservation policies of the government. One of them is paying local residents for conserving the forest.