The western pond turtle originally ranged from northern
Baja California, Mexico, north to the southern regions of
British Columbia, Canada. It was once a large part of a major fishery on
Tulare Lake, California, supplying San Francisco with a local favorite, turtle soup, as well as feed for hogs that learned to dive for it in the shallows of
Hog Island, also on Tulare Lake. As of 2007, it has become rare or absent in the
Puget Sound region of
Washington. It has a disjunct distribution in most of the Northwest, and some isolated populations exist in southern Washington. The western pond turtle is now rare in the
Willamette Valley north of
Eugene, Oregon, but abundance increases south of that city where temperatures are higher. It may be locally common in some streams, rivers and ponds in southern Oregon. A few records are reported east of the
Cascade Mountains, but these may have been based on introduced individuals. It ranges up to in Washington, and to about in Oregon. It also occurs in Uvas Canyon area, Santa Cruz Mountains, California, and in the
North Bay, and lakes such as
Fountaingrove Lake. Many taxonomic authorities now split what had been considered one species of turtle into two species. The southern species is named
Actinemys pallida, or the southwestern pond turtle. Its range is southern California and Mexico. The northern species remains
Actinemys marmorata, with a range of northern California northward. It is then usually referred to as the northwestern pond turtle. ==Ecology and behavior==