Yes, they can live in any moderate climate, many places have non native popoulations.
yes in wild because they have powerful jaws to bite with and they have bacteria on their skin
NO ! Since it would NEVER come across such an unsuitable food in the wild !
The red eared slider does, but the yellow bellied slider does not.
I dont know it depends on the red eared slider
1stly its not "red eye slider", its "red eared slider". the biting may be his way of saying keep out of my territory. you should separate themin these cases
If only the wild turtle shows no agression. From my xperience, my wild turtle fatally bit my small red eared slider to death.
well, a "slider turtle", or a red eared slider always has a red line where their ears would be. that's obviously how they get the name!
they dont hibernate they brumate. In the wild they start brumating in October when the temperature reaches below 10 °C (50 °F) and they come back up in March. In captivity they cant brumate at room temperature.
Of course! A red eared slider is the most common pet turtle in America!
female red ear slider have a much shorter tail then the male.
There is no such thing as a red eye slider, maybe you were trying to say redeared slider. (the red is not on it's eye, it is on it's ears) Common mistake. Check this website out. It tells you alot of things about the red eared slider. http://www.austinsturtlepage.com/Care/caresheet-red_ear_slider.htm
Red eared slider turtles bask though out the day. There is no specific time that they prefer.