Skip to main content
  1. Species/

Clemmys guttata

Common Name: Spotted Turtle
Clemmys guttata
Clemmys guttata

Scientific Classification

Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Reptilia
Order: Testudines
Family: Emydidae
Genus: Clemmys
Species: Clemmys guttata

Conservation Status

Identifying Features

Spotted turtles are small and can grow to be around 3-5 inches in length. They have smooth shells that are black and covered in tiny yellow spots. The yellow spots continue on to cover their head, neck, legs, and tail. On each side of the head, they have a large orange blotch.

Habitat & Range

Spotted turtles live in wet woods, marshes, muddy streams throughout the east coast of United States and near the Great Lakes region.

Behavior

Spotted turtles are inactive during freezing temperatures in winter and extremely hot temperatures in the summer. During these dormant times, they burrow into leaf litter or muddy wetland bottoms and slow down their metabolism to survive long periods without food and very little oxygen. In favorable conditions, they are active hunters and search for worms, crustaceans, insects, amphibian eggs, and aquatic plants. They hunt and eat exclusively in the water.

Life Cycle

Spotted turtles breed during the spring, with females laying around 3-7 eggs in a dug-up nest that is exposed to the sun. After the young turtles hatch, they are independent immediately and mature after 7 to 15 years of age.

Featured image by John Mosesso

Related

Chrysemys picta
Painted Turtle
Glyptemys insculpta
Wood Turtle
Chelydra serpentina
Common Snapping Turtle