Bell's hinge-back tortoise

{{short description|Species of African reptile}}

{{Speciesbox

| image = Kinixys belliana nogueyi 1 by diotime.jpg

| image_caption = Kinixys belliana "nogueyi"

| status = LC

| status_system = IUCN2.3

| status_ref =

| genus = Kinixys

| species = belliana

| authority = Gray, 1831

| synonyms_ref = {{Cite journal|journal=Vertebrate Zoology|title=Checklist of Chelonians of the World|year=2007|author=Fritz, Uwe|author2=Havaš, Peter |volume=57|issue=2|pages=285|doi=10.3897/vz.57.e30895 |doi-access=free |issn=1864-5755}}

| synonyms =

;Kinixys belliana belliana

  • Testudo (Kinyxis) belliana
    {{small|Gray, 1831}}
  • Kinixys belliana
    {{small|— Gray, 1831}}
  • Cinixys (Cinothorax) belliana
    {{small|— Fitzinger, 1835}}
  • Cinothorax bellianus
    {{small|— Fitzinger, 1843}}
  • Kinixys schoensis
    {{small|Rüppell, 1845}}
  • Kinixys belliana zombensis
    {{small|Hewitt, 1931}}
  • Kinixys belliana zuluensis
    {{small|Hewitt, 1931}}
  • Kinixys belliana belliana
    {{small|— Mertens, L. Müller & Rust, 1934}}
  • Kinixys zuluensis
    {{small|— Hewitt, 1937}}
  • Kinixys zombensis
    {{small|— F. J. Mitchell, 1946}}
  • Kinixys belliana schoensis
    {{small|— Mertens & Wermuth, 1955}}
  • Kinixys belliana mertensi
    {{small|Laurent, 1956}}
  • Madakinixys domerguei
    {{small|Vuillemin, 1972}}
  • Kinixys shoensis [sic]
    {{small|Pritchard, 1979}} (ex errore)
  • Madakinixys domergei [sic]
    {{small|Gaffney, 1979}} (ex errore)
  • Kinixys belliana domerguei
    {{small|— Bour, 1985}}

;Kinixys belliana nogueyi

  • Homopus nogueyi
    {{small|Lataste, 1886}}
  • Cinixys dorri
    {{small|Lataste, 1888}}
  • Cinixys nogueyi
    {{small|— Siebenrock, 1903}}
  • Kinixys nogueyi
    {{small|— Hewitt, 1931}}
  • Kinixys belliana nogueyi
    {{small|— Mertens, L. Müller & Rust, 1934}}

}}

Bell's hinge-back tortoise (Kinixys belliana), also known commonly as Bell's eastern hinged tortoise,{{Harnvb|Rhodin|2010|p=000.130}} is a species of tortoise in the family Testudinidae. The species is native to central Africa. It has the hinge that characterizes all tortoises in the genus Kinixys. There are no recognized subspecies.

Etymology

Both the specific name, belliana, and the common name are in honor of English zoologist Thomas Bell.Beolens, Bo; Watkins, Michael; Grayson, Michael (2011). The Eponym Dictionary of Reptiles. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. xiii + 296 pp. {{ISBN|978-1-4214-0135-5}}. (Kinixys belliana, p. 22).

Description

Bell's hinge-back tortoise is a medium-sized light brown tortoise. They can grow up to 22 cm. On the back of its shell, the tortoise has a 90 degree hinge which, when closed, can protect its rear legs and tail from predators. This broad band of flexible connective tissue is located between the 4th and 5th costals and the 7th and 8th peripherals in adults.

The scutes on its slightly domed and elongated shell typically have a radiating pattern of dark patches, though these can fade. Adult males have a concave belly. Most Bell's hinge-backs have five claws on each forefoot.

Distribution and habitat

File:Engraving of Bell's Hinge-back tortoise.jpgIn its habitat, Bell's hinge-back tortoise favours tropical and sub-tropical savannahs of sub-Saharan Africa.

It was traditionally considered to be the most common and widespread hinge-back tortoise, found throughout a large part of sub-Saharan Africa such as in Sudan, Tanzania, the Democratic Republic of the Congo and down to southern Africa. However, a revision of the species advocated by Kindler et al. (2012) restricted it only to the central African populations, ranging from Angola to Burundi.{{Cite journal|author1=Kindler, Carolin|author2=Branch, William R.|authorlink2=:fr:William Roy Branch|author3=Hofmeyr, Margaretha D.|author4=Maran, Jérôme|author5=Široký, Pavel|author6=Vences, Miguel|authorlink6=Miguel Vences|author7=Harvey, James|author8=Hauswaldt, Susanne J.|author9=Schleicher, Alfred|author10=Stuckas, Heiko|author11=Fritz, Uwe|year=2012|title=Molecular phylogeny of African hinge-back tortoises (Kinixys): implications for phylogeography and taxonomy (Testudines: Testudinidae)|journal=Journal of Zoological Systematics and Evolutionary Research|volume=50|issue=3|pages=192–201|doi=10.1111/j.1439-0469.2012.00660.x|doi-access=free}}

Diet

Bell's hinge-back tortoise is an omnivore, with a very varied diet consisting mainly of a range of different plants, but also including insects and other meat.

It feeds on vegetables, twigs, roots, leaves, fruits, earthworms, snails, tadpoles and other small invertebrates.

Threats and conservation

In its natural habitat, its predators are leopards, hawks and eagles.

Currently it is mainly threatened by widespread collection from the wild for the illegal international trade in the species. It is also collected by local peoples for food and human population growth in the area is putting pressure on the species. Human-induced fire is also a threat.{{cn|date=June 2020}}

Its shells are used as musical instruments by the priests of the Oroko and other peoples of southwestern Cameroon to accompany religious incantations.Blench, Roger. 2009. [http://www.rogerblench.info/Ethnomusicology/Papers/Africa/Cameroun/Cameroun%20musical%20instruments%20book.pdf A guide to the musical instruments of Cameroun: classification, distribution, history and vernacular names]. Cambridge: Kay Williamson Educational Foundation.

As of March 22, 2000, the USDA has banned importation of the Bell's hinge-back tortoise, leopard tortoise and the African spurred tortoise.{{Cite web |date=2000-03-22 |title=Importation and Interstate Movement of Certain Land Tortoises |url=https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2000/03/22/00-7014/importation-and-interstate-movement-of-certain-land-tortoises |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230107155917/https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2000/03/22/00-7014/importation-and-interstate-movement-of-certain-land-tortoises |archive-date=2023-01-07 |access-date=2023-01-07 |website=Federal Register |publisher=Federal Register |pages=15216–15218 |publication-date=2000-03-22}}

Subspecies

No subspecies are currently recognized as being valid. Formerly the following subspecies were recognized:

  • K. b. belliana – Bell's hinge-back
  • K. b. domerguei – Madagascan hinge-back
  • K. b. nogueyi – western hinge-back
  • K. b. zombensis – southeastern hinge-back

Kindler et al. (2012) raised the subspecies K. b. zombensis (which they considered a senior synonym of K. b. domerguei) and K. b. nogueyi to the ranks of species, respectively Kinixys zombensis and Kinixys nogueyi. K. b. domerguei is now treated as subspecies of Kinixys zombensis (i.e., Kinixys zombensis domerguei).{{NRDB species |genus=Kinixys |species=zombensis |accessdate=21 August 2020}}

Parasites of hinge-back tortoises

Kinixys tortoises play host to a number of ectoparasites (external) and endoparasites (internal) A survey (by Alan Probert & Clive Humphreys) of mixed captive K. spekii and K. belliana (mostly K. spekii) in Zimbabwe showed that ticks (Arachnida) and roundworms (Nematoda) of genera Angusticium, Atractis and Tachygontria infect these tortoises. This has been reported by others as well. However, some of the tiny roundworms (photographed under SEM) are very likely new species and as yet remain undescribed.

References

{{Reflist|refs=

{{NRDB species |genus=Kinixys |species=belliana |accessdate=21 August 2020}}

}}

  • Smylie, A. [http://www.gctts.org/Kinixys/ Kinixys (Hinged-Back Tortoises)]. Gulf Coast Turtle and Tortoise Society.
  • Hingeback Central. [https://web.archive.org/web/20011202014351/http://www.geocities.com/hiramtom/belliana.html Kinixys belliana Bell's Hingeback Tortoise].

;Bibliography

  • {{Anchor|CITEREFRhodin2010}}{{cite web|url=http://www.iucn-tftsg.org/wp-content/uploads/file/Accounts/crm_5_000_checklist_v3_2010.pdf|title=Turtles of the World 2010 Update: Annotated Checklist of Taxonomy, Synonymy, Distribution and Conservation Status|date=2010-12-14|accessdate=2010-12-15|last=Rhodin|first=Anders G.J.|author2=van Dijk, Peter Paul|author3=Iverson, John B.|author4=Shaffer, H. Bradley|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20110717125632/http://www.iucn-tftsg.org/wp-content/uploads/file/Accounts/crm_5_000_checklist_v3_2010.pdf|archivedate=2011-07-17|url-status=dead}}

{{Testudinidae}}

{{Taxonbar|from=Q1529918}}

Category:Kinixys

Category:Turtles of Africa

Category:Reptiles of Angola

Category:Vertebrates of Burundi

Category:Reptiles of the Central African Republic

Category:Reptiles of the Democratic Republic of the Congo

Category:Vertebrates of Eritrea

Category:Reptiles of Ethiopia

Category:Reptiles of Kenya

Category:Vertebrates of Rwanda

Category:Reptiles of Somalia

Category:Reptiles of South Sudan

Category:Reptiles of Tanzania

Category:Reptiles of Uganda

Category:Reptiles described in 1831

Category:Taxa named by John Edward Gray