Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Why Turtles Have Shells

- Secrets of the Shell

June 10 , 2013

No other animal has a shell quite like a turtle’s. Biologists, or scientists who study living things, have spent nearly two centuries trying to understand how turtles ended up with their unique shells. Now, thanks to the discovery of the turtle’s earliest known ancestor, scientists have found a big clue in the mystery of the turtle’s shell.

The shell of a turtle grows from bone. That’s different from other animals with protective armour, like armadillos. Armadillos are mammals that have thick scales that look like shells. In fact, an armadillo’s covering is more similar to that of crocodiles than to that of turtles. And while the shells of crabs and lobsters are shed and regrown over the years, turtles keep theirs for life.

For years, the oldest known turtle fossil was from a species called Odontochel­ys semitestac­ea. It lived about 220 million years ago. Its shell looks very similar to that of today’s turtles. But how did this complicate­d feature evolve, or develop over a long time? Scientists were curious about how turtles were related to even more ancient reptiles.

Now perhaps they have found a “missing link”. Older fossils have been found recently from a creature known as Eunotosaur­us africanus. Found in South Africa,

A turtle’s shell may look like one big backpack. But it’s actually made up of about 50 separate bones. Before the recent fossil discoverie­s, scientists thought that reptile shells evolved from scales. Lyson thinks that turtles’ shells evolved from ribs.

This is not an easy evolutiona­ry step. Ribs typically allow animals to breathe easily. But imagine how much harder it would be to breathe if you had a thick shell

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