Biology:Geochelone vulcanica

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Gran Canaria giant tortoise
Temporal range: Miocene-Pleistocene
Scientific classification edit
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Reptilia
Order: Testudines
Suborder: Cryptodira
Superfamily: Testudinoidea
Family: Testudinidae
Genus: Geochelone
Species:
G. vulcanica
Binomial name
Geochelone vulcanica
López-Jurado & Mateo, 1993

The Gran Canaria giant tortoise[1] (Geochelone vulcanica) is an extinct species of cryptodire turtle in the family Testudinidae endemic to the island of Gran Canaria, in the Canary Islands.[2]

Characteristics

This is one of the two described species of giant tortoises that inhabited the Canary Islands from the Miocene to the upper Pleistocene. The other species is G. burchardi, from the island of Tenerife.[3][4]

G. vulcanica was described by López-Jurado & Mateo in 1993. It is believed that the ancestors of these two species of giant tortoises reached the Canary Islands from North Africa.[5] The majority of G. vulcanica fossils are of eggs and nests ranging in age from the Miocene until Pliocene. Bones and shells are known from the Miocene until the Upper Pleistocene. The maximum shell length is up to 61 centimeters, make it slightly smaller than G. burchardi, which had a shell length range of 65 to 94 cm.[6]

Fossilized tortoise eggs have been found in the islands of Lanzarote and Fuerteventura; however, these eggs have not yet been properly described or named.[7] The species of Fuerteventura has been linked to G. burchardi, but this identification is uncertain, and has been challenged.[8][9]

See also

  • List of extinct animals
  • List of African animals extinct in the Holocene
  • List of extinct animals of Europe
  • Island gigantism

References