As part of a large comparative study on the development of reptilian skin, we provide the first
ultrastructural description of differentiation of the epidermis of the carapace and plastron in the Chelonia,
using the Australian pleurodiran turtle Emydura macquarii as a model. The epidermis is initially composed
of an external flat peridermis and a basal layer of cuboidal cells. During differentiation, the peridermis
darkens, flakes off and is partially lost before hatching. Four to 6 layers of flat cells containing lipids and
mucus form from the basal layer beneath the external peridermis. Because such cells are found only during
embryogenesis, we have referred to these layers as embryonic epidermis. They contain reticulate bodies made
of a meshwork of coarse filaments similar to those described in the inner peridermis of lizard and bird
embryos. In advanced embryos, cells of the embryonic epidermis condense into a thin dark stratum which is
subsequently lost after hatching. The lowermost 2 layers of the embryonic epidermis keratinise, as for a
typical lepidosaurian α-layer. A splitting zone is progressively formed beneath the α-layer to separate the
embryonic epidermis from the underlying β-layer. Patterns of cytodifferentiation of the β-synthesising cells
over the carapace and plastron essentially resemble those of the lepidosaurian epidermis. The β-keratin
matrix initially accumulates among ribosomes as round bodies not clearly surrounded by a membrane.
These bodies appear not to be derived from the Golgi apparatus. Melanosomes and other dark granules of
uncertain nature are present among early differentiating β-cells. The round β-keratin bodies merge with the
dense bodies to produce the definitive variegated pattern of the mature β-keratin layer. The histochemistry
suggests that calcium combines with organic molecules within β-keratinising cells to harden the tissue. In
contrast to the β-keratin cells of lizards and snakes, cells of the mature β-keratin layer of E. macquarii
maintain their cell boundaries in part or completely, a characteristics shared with the β-keratin layer of
Sphenodon and crocodilians.