Eastern long-necked turtle
The eastern long-necked turtle is an east Australian species of snake-necked turtle that inhabits a wide variety of water bodies and is an opportunistic feeder. It is a side-necked turtle (Pleurodira), meaning that it bends its head sideways into its shell rather than pulling it directly back.
Image: CSIRO Science Image 7775 Eastern Snakenecked Turtle
Image: Chelodina longicollis ventral view of female
At the Washington National Zoo
Neck bent back into its shell
Chelodina, collectively known as snake-necked turtles, is a large and diverse genus of long-necked chelid turtles with a complicated nomenclatural history. Although in the past, Macrochelodina and Macrodiremys have been considered separate genera and prior to that all the same, they are now considered subgenera of the Chelodina, further Macrochelodina and Macrodiremys are now known to apply to the same species, hence Chelydera is used for the northern snake-necked turtles.
Chelodina
Image: CSIRO Science Image 7775 Eastern Snakenecked Turtle
Image: Chelodina mccordi at the Columbus Zoo 2011 07 11 IMG 0644
Image: New Guinea snake necked turtle