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Turtles can breathe through their cloaca for 72 hours.

VnExpressVnExpress26/02/2024


Australia The Mary River Turtle is adapted to life underwater thanks to a specially constructed cloaca that helps it breathe in water.

Appearance of the Mary River turtle. Photo: EDGE of Existence

Appearance of the Mary River turtle. Photo: EDGE of Existence

The Mary River turtle ( Elusor macrurus ) lives in the river of the same name in Queensland, Australia. It mainly eats aquatic plants, but sometimes it also eats seeds, fruits, and insect larvae. This turtle is characterized by the green algae growing on its head and body, which helps it hide from predators in the water. It also has long, fleshy spines called barbels that protrude from its chin, which help it sense its surroundings. In addition to its unusual appearance, the Mary River turtle has another unusual feature located in its cloaca.

According to Rikki Gumbs, a researcher with the EDGE of Existence program, a conservation initiative focused on unique and overlooked species, the Mary River turtle can spend days underwater and breathe in this environment, something very few reptiles can do, through a special organ located inside the cloaca. The cloaca, commonly found in non-mammalian vertebrates, connects to the intestinal, reproductive, and urinary tracts.

While some freshwater turtles use their skin to breathe underwater, using glands in their cloaca allows them to stay submerged for longer periods of time. In the case of the Mary River turtle, this can be as long as 72 hours. Glands called cloacal sacs are covered with papillae, small structures located on the walls of the cloaca. Oxygen in the water permeates through the papillae and enters the turtle's bloodstream.

The Mary River turtle is also unique. No other turtles are its closest relatives. “It is the only living species of its genus. The ancestors of the Mary River turtle are thought to have diverged from all living turtle lineages more than 18 million years ago, several million years before our ancestors diverged from orangutans,” Gumbs says.

Despite its popularity in the pet trade in the 1960s and 1970s, the Mary River turtle's wild distribution remained a mystery to scientists until it was formally described as a species in 1994.

An Khang (According to Live Science )



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