The preferred natural habitat of K. herrerai is permanent bodies of fresh water, at elevations from sea level to 1,150 m (3,770 ft).[1]
Life history
Based on a 1988 study of a population near Rancho Nuevo in Tamaulipas, Mexico, the males of K. herrerai attain a larger size than females, with a proportionally smaller plastron, and narrower and shallower carapace.[5]
Symbionts reported include a balanomorph barnacle, leeches of the genus Placobdella, and the filamentous green alga Basicladia.[5]
Food items identified indicate an omnivorous diet, with wild figs the major plant component, and several insect orders and millipedes represented.[5]
Reproduction
Courtship in K. herrerai agrees in most respects with courtship of other kinosternid species. Sexual maturity in females is apparently attained between 115 and 130 mm (4.58 and 5.12 inches) straight carapace length. Clutch size is estimated to range from two to four. Several clutches may be laid in a reproductive season.[5]
Stejneger L (1925). "New species and subspecies of American turtles". Journal of the Washington Academy of Sciences. 15: 462–463. (Kinosternon herrerai, new species, p. 462).