Apalone is a fairly new classification, resurrected by Meylan in 1987, assigned to North American species of the genus
Trionyx. They are still listed as
Trionyx in some texts. (
Trionyx now refers specifically to certain softshell species found mainly in Africa.) Molecular phylogenetic studies generally suggest that
Apalone is most closely related to the highly endangered Asian genus
Rafetus, with the two genera most likely diverging during the
Late Eocene. The ancestral
Apalone most likely crossed from Asia into North America via
Beringia, taking advantage of the warm climate during the Eocene.
Species The following three species are recognized as being valid. •
Apalone ferox – Florida softshell turtle -
South Carolina,
Georgia,
Florida, and
Alabama •
Apalone mutica – smooth softshell turtle -
United States, east of the
Rocky Mountains •
Apalone spinifera – spiny softshell turtle -
Canada (southern
Ontario and
Quebec), most of the United States, and northeastern
Mexico.
Nota bene: A
binomial authority in parentheses indicates that the species was originally described in a genus other than
Apalone.
Fossil taxa One definitive fossil species is also known,
A. amorense Valdes, Bourque & Vitek, 2017 from the late
Miocene (late
Clarendonian) of Florida (
Alachua Formation). In addition, two other potential fossil species, generally placed in "
Trionyx"
sensu lato, may belong to
Apalone:
Apalone latus (
Gilmore, 1919) from the
Campanian-aged
Dinosaur Park Formation of
Alberta, Canada and
Apalone leucopotamica (
Cope, 1891) from the late
Eocene-aged
Cypress Hills Formation of
Saskatchewan. These two species are much older than any other remains assigned to
Apalone, and even predate the presumed divergence of the genus based on molecular phylogenies. However, none of these have been rigorously tested, and the placement of these genera within
Apalone may just be a result of
homoplasy. ==Sexual dimorphism==