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   » » Wiki: Kinixys
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Kinixys is a of in the family . The genus was erected by Thomas Bell in 1827. The in the genus Kinixys are native to Sub-Saharan Africa and and commonly known as hinged tortoises or hinge-back tortoises.Kirkpatrick, D. (1998). "African Hingeback Tortoises of the Genus Kinixys". Reptile & Amphibian Magazine. 54: 32-37.

Most of the Kinixys species are . They feed mainly on a wide range of different leaves, weeds, roots, flowers and fruits. However, they also eat worms, insects and other small .


Species
The following species are recognised in the genus Kinixys:
+ !Image !Species !Common name
Kinixys belliana

Bell's hinge-back tortoise
Kinixys erosa

forest hinge-back tortoise
Kinixys homeana

Home's hinge-back tortoise
Kinixys lobatsiana

Lobatse hinge-back tortoise
Kinixys natalensis

Natal hinge-back tortoise

Western hinge-back tortoise
Kinixys spekii

Speke's hinge-back tortoise
Kinixys zombensis

Eastern hinge-back tortoise
: A binomial authority in parentheses indicates that the species was originally described in a genus other than Kinixys.

Distribution and habitat
The several species of the genus Kinxys are found across much of tropical and sub-tropical sub-Saharan Africa, ranging as far south as in South Africa, and as far north as the fringes of the and . However, individuals are often very scarce within this range, and several species are threatened.

Though the species' wide geographic ranges overlap considerably, they are separated from each other by favouring different habitats within this range. Some species (such as K. belliana) favour open or grasslands, others (such as K. homeana) favour rainforest.


Parasites
Species of tortoises in the Kinixys play host to a number of ectoparasites (external) and endoparasites (internal). A survey (by Alan Probert & Clive Humphreys) of mixed captive K. spekii and K. belliana (mostly K. spekii) in Zimbabwe showed that the following parasites were known to infest/infect this species. This had been observed and published by others too. However some of the tiny roundworms (photographed under scanning electron microscope) are very likely new species and as yet remain undescribed.
  • Ticks (Arachnida)
  • Roundworms (Nematoda) – Angusticium, Atractis and Tachygontria


Further reading
  • Bell, T. (1827). "On two new Genera of Land Tortoises". The Transactions of the Linnean Society of London. 15: 392–401. ( Kinixys, new genus, p. 398). (in English and Latin).

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