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I've found my pet snapping turtle to snap only when provoked to the extreme. She's a baby and has been handled daily. The one time she bit me I had her standing up by a grasp on the side of her shell, and I was tickling her arm pits which drives her crazy, then I made the mistake, for the first time, of touching her neck. She got a twisted little look on her face, opened her mouth kinda slow then bit me.
Being a baby it didn't hurt at all.
I've read that if handled regularly throughout their entire lives, snapping turtles, generally, will not bite.
As the saying goes though, "You can't teach an old turtle new tricks."
So, if you've caught a grown up wild snapping turtle, and you're trying to domesticate him, forget it.
Beyond age other factors determine how well behaved a snapper will be. If your snapper has memory of roaming freely and now you've got him caged and wholly lonely, your snapper most likely views you as his jailer.
If your snapping turtle never gets a "piece of action" so to speak, then you can well expect he'll be crotchety. And if you feed him every other day as I've read recommended by some, you can expect him to be in a constant bad mood.
I've noticed that when I first got my snapper, she was days old and terrified of everything. I've watched her grow less fearful but now she requires constant company or she feels neglected.
Making a manual treadmill I let my baby snapper run across my hands for hours a day. She's usually smiling and bright eyed. She also sleeps on my chest, sometimes on a cloth in her enclosure. If I find her sleeping with her face under the water I put her out of the water on the cloth. I'm guessing why wild snappers are so mean is that they breathe so little oxygen because they sleep under the water, breathing just a few times per night. They sleep in the water to avoid being ambushed by predators. It's noticeable how much quicker and happier my snapper is when she's slept out of the water.
So how snappy your snapper is depends a lot on how well you treat your snapper.
Alligator snapping turtles are larger and have much stronger bites. Alligator snapping turtle also live longer than common snapping turtles. Alligator snapping turtles can live to be 100 at the longest while the common snapping turtle lives to be around 70 at the maximum. Alligator snapping turtles have smaller shells and bigger heads. Common snapping turtles have the oppisite.
They are all types of turtles : the snapping turtle, sea turtle, and box turtle.
alligator snapping turtle
A snapping turtle will occasionally come out of the water to bask in the sunlight for an hour or so. Female snapping turtles come out of the water to dig a hole and lay her eggs. She may be out of the water for up to five days.
yes
No, it is natural for them to snap at things.
Yes, if it's a snapping turtle, it can SNAP your finger right off!
Snapping Turtles will snap because it is their way of protecting themselves from enemies and their prey. The animals and their prey, therefore get scared and leaving the turtle alone. It is in their nature for snapping turtles to snap.
It's sort of both because they snap or bite like a crocodile, and it has croc ridges on it's shell. It's like a turtle because it has a shell like a turtle and can tuck into it's shell like a turtle. so a Crocodile Snapping Turtle is a mix of a turtle and a crocodile.
Alligator snapping turtles are larger and have much stronger bites. Alligator snapping turtle also live longer than common snapping turtles. Alligator snapping turtles can live to be 100 at the longest while the common snapping turtle lives to be around 70 at the maximum. Alligator snapping turtles have smaller shells and bigger heads. Common snapping turtles have the oppisite.
yes; there is also an alligator snapping turtle
aligator snapping turtle
the phylum for the snapping turtle is Chordata
Gulf snapping turtle was created in 1994.
Yes. Adult snapping turtles will eat baby snapping turtles.
If snapping turtles have salt the tongue of the snapping turtle will dry out and the turtle will have no interest to eat.
Yes, there is a species of an alligator snapping turtle. sammi was here!