Did you know?

By: Matt Young
derivative work: RexxS
[ CC-BY-SA-1.0]
via Wikimedia Commons

Adult turtles can live
in the wild for 55 years!

painted turtle swimming

By André Karwath aka Aka (Own work)
[CC-BY-SA-2.5], via Wikimedia Commons

Meet Me

The painted turtle (Chrysemys picta) is the most widespread native turtle of North America. It lives in slow-moving fresh waters, from southern Canada to Louisiana and northern Mexico, and from the Atlantic to the Pacific. The turtle is the only species of the genus Chrysemys, which is part of the pond turtle family Emydidae. Fossils show that the painted turtle existed 15 million years ago.



Our Shell

The adult painted turtle female is 10–25 cm (4–10 in) long; the male is smaller. The turtle's top shell is dark and smooth, without a ridge. Its skin is olive to black with red, orange, or yellow stripes on its extremities. The subspecies can be distinguished by their shells: the eastern has straight-aligned top shell segments; the midland has a large gray mark on the bottom shell; the southern has a red line on the top shell; the western has a red pattern on the bottom shell.