I have no idea of why you use the word "still", looks like you think all knowledge in mankind was acquired just a while ago and all the previous knowlegde is invalid? Anyway there is a list of scientists that uses Pongidae as family, much shorter than would be the total list (because there are toooooo many pages of results for include all), not including publications from institutions without concrete authors (f. e. British Museum (Natural History), Wistar Institute of Anatomy and Biology, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the Smithsonian, etc) (despite I realize these have the most of the publications!) and not including countless equally valid non-scientific media such as infinite divulgative natural history books/encyclopedias, sheets, virtual media, etc.
-Alfred Edmund Brehm
-Armando Bilardo
-C S Churcher
-Clifford J Jolly
-Colin P Groves
-Daniel Giraud Elliot
-Duane A Schlitter
-Edward Ottway Dodson
-Erich Thenius
-F I B Kayanja
-F Krapp
-F Müller
-Francis George Allman Barnard
-Frank W Gorham
-Frederick Charles Bawden
-Frederick Nutter Chasen
-Frederick Tilney
-G Lampel
-George Henry Hamilton Tate
-Gerrit Smith Miller
-Glover Morrill Allen
-Gordon Floyd Ferris
-H W Ludwig
-Hans-Reiner Simon
-Henry Aslop Riley
-Homer William Smith
-Hugh H. Genoways
-I Tekkaya
-J Kälin
-J. Knox Jones
-Jack Fooden
-James Richard Ewart Mills
-Jane Thornback
-Jean-Lou Jutine
-John Eric Hill
-John Maxwell Anderson
-John Reeves Ellerman
-John Zachary Young
-K N Prasad
-Ke Chung Kim
-Kristina M. Adams
-L Martin
-Loris Shano Russell
-M Genoud
-M R Hone
-M R Stanley Price
-Mary Jane Guthrie
-O Kieschnick
-Otto Appel
-Otto Zur Strassen
-Paul Amos Moody
-Paul Sorauer
-Percy Milton Butler
-Peter Andrews
-Peter John Andrews
-Peter Vogel
-Phillip V Tobias
-Raymonde Cintract
-René Laubach
-Richard Eliot Blackwelder
-Richard Pearson Strong
-Robert D. Adlard
-Roger D Price
-Ronald Hamlyn-Harris
-Ruth M. Blackwelder
-S R K Chopra (describer of
Gigantopithecus)
-Samuel Charles Kendeigh
-Samuel F Hildebrand
-Seth Eugene Meek
-Stephen L Williams
-Suzanne B Mclaren
-Sydney Anderson
-T I Molleson
-Terence Charles Stuart Morrison-Scott
-Theodore Cedric Ruch
-Thomas Donald Carter
-William D Turnbull
-Wolfbernhard B Spatz
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I really don't believe that you are not enough intelligent as for know which is true and which is the lie, so clearly this is a retoric question did for the only purposing bullying once more. I don't waste my time in replying bullys.
Railing again the thread and hoping that no other trolls derail it:
VIETNAMESE POND TURTLE -
Mauremys annamensis
Photo taken at: Plzen zoo, Czech republic
Short taxonomy: Sauropsida > Chelonia > Emydidae (please note, if I include the "short taxonomy" section is for teach zoochatters the most logical and widely accepted taxonomy for each, so don't start telling me that this belong to Geoemydidae instead Emydidae, that the genus should be Annamemys instead Mauremys (as was signaged in Plzen zoo), that the valid name for the order is Testudines and not Chelonia, or that I considere groups as even-toed mammals, or monocotyledons, or birds, or mammals (all of these already stated in this thread and nobody said that they're incorrect), and these groups are invalid and doesn't exists because we all are bony fishes according to modern "taxonomy". If you want you can said instead that YOU want to change Mauremys from Emydidae to Geoemydidae, being that your personal opinion, and not that "please note: Mauremys was incorporated into the Geoemydidae several years ago". But of course this will not contribute in nothing to the thread nor to the forum, so the best way is keep silent and learn or instead tell only constructive things)
Native range: central Vietnam
Ex-situ frequence: Common
Danger factors: Main threat is excessive harvest for its meat (and in a lesser exent for supposed medicinal purposes and the pet trade). This is a problem that comes mainly by the demand from China, and affects all Asian turtles to the point it was given a name: the Asian Turtle Crisis (Hendrie 2000). The quick expansion of rice fields and urban settlements also destroyed a lot of the former habitat of this species.
Other comments: The area of occupance is tiny and all field surveys after 1941 failed in finding wild individuals. However it was seen from time to time in the local markets sold as food, what means that wild individuals were present. In 2006 was discovered again a wild population. The
Cuc Phuong Turtle Conservation in Viernam keeps a captive breeding program and other institutions too, and as the species is very close to be extinct in the wild, reintroduction programs are on way.