The Emydidae are most closely related to the
tortoises (
Testudinidae) and are included along with that family in the
Testudinoidea. Shared features include a lack of inframarginal scutes, the shape and muscle attachment of the
ilium, and the shape of the eighth
cervical vertebra (biconvex). Within the Emydidae, two subfamilies were recognized along biogeographic lines. The Emydidae as understood today contain New World species (except
Emys), while the former Batagurinae, today a separate family
Geoemydidae, contain Old World species (except
Rhinoclemmys). Osteological characters, such as the construction of the
mandible and articulations of the cervical vertebrae distinguish the two families. The enigmatic
big-headed turtle (
Platysternon megacephalum) was for some time considered a specialized, but still very primitive early offshoot of the Emydidae. With the Geoemydidae being split off, though, it is better reinstated as its own family, the Platysternidae, though it seems very close to the emydid-geoemydid group.
Fossil record Presumed emydids are well represented in the
fossil record.
Gyremys sectabilis and
Clemmys backmani are both North American species that date from the
Upper Cretaceous and
Paleocene, respectively. These are the two oldest fossil species. Many other extinct species traditionally placed in the Emydidae are known from the
Eocene of North America, Asia, and Europe, but the Old World
taxa are likely to be more properly Geoemydidae. The North American genus
Palaeochelys and probably the trans-
Atlantic Echmatemys, too, would seem to be Emydidae, but their precise relationships to the living genera are indeterminate.
Classification The two subfamilies and genera are arranged as follows: •
Subfamily Deirochelyinae •
Chrysemys •
Deirochelys •
Graptemys •
Malaclemys •
Pseudemys •
Trachemys • '
Subfamily incertae sedis''''' • †
Acherontemys • †
Acherontemys heckmani • †
Psilosemys • †
Psilosemys wyomingensis ==References==