On the northern coast of New South Wales, the Manning River Sawshelled Turtle paddles secretively amongst the platypuses. The species is so rarely seen it was declared “Endangered” by the Australian government in 2017. It is one of the regions three endemic turtles, along with the Bellinger River Snapping Turtle (Myuchelys georgesi) and Bell's Sawshelled Turtle (Myuchelys bellii), all of which are Endangered and which are found nowhere else on Earth. Restricted to a single river system, the turtles are extremely vulnerable to habitat loss, predation, lack of genetic diversity, and disease. Invasive species are perhaps the greatest concern. Non-native pigs and foxes routinely destroy and consume nearly every nest, resulting in catastrophic losses every breeding season.