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Cryptodira is commonly called the "Hidden-Neck Turtles" or the "Inside-Neck Turtles". Cryptodira differ from Pleurodira (side-necked turtles) in that they lower their necks and pull the heads straight back into the shells, instead of folding their necks sideways along the body under the shells' marginals.
In California, breeders or resellers are required to obtain permits and pay taxes on the sales of dogs. ... Los Angeles ordered roughly 500 puppies from Ohio since 2021, according to travel ...
Testudinoidea is a superfamily within the suborder Cryptodira of the order Testudines. It includes the pond turtles (Family: Emydidae), Asian turtles (Family: Geoemydidae), the monotypic big-headed turtle (Family: Platysternidae), and the tortoises (Family: Testudinidae).
Initially treated as a suborder sister to Cryptodira, [1] they were then thought to be a very primitive lineage inside the Cryptodira according to the most common use of the latter taxon. [2] They are now often regarded as late-diverging stem -turtles, lying outside the clade formed by Cryptodira and Pleurodira .
The Asian forest tortoise (Manouria emys), also known commonly as the Mountain tortoise or Burmese Brown Mountain tortoise, is a species of tortoise in the family Testudinidae. The species is endemic to Southeast Asia. It is believed to be among the most primitive of living tortoises, based on molecular and morphological studies.
The Gran Canaria giant tortoise [1] (Centrochelys vulcanica [2]) is an extinct species of cryptodire turtle in the family Testudinidae endemic to the island of Gran Canaria, in the Canary Islands. [ 3 ]
Chersobius is a genus of tiny tortoises in the family Testudinidae, endemic to southern Africa. The genus includes the smallest tortoises in the world. All three species were previously assigned to the genus Homopus. [citation needed]