Yes, alligator snapping turtles have backbones.
Yes, it does.
leather back sea turtle.
well then you let him go back to his mother...
They do not. They are normal reptiles that have blood similar to humans.
bones cracking and cartilage snaping
well a snapping turtle will bite you and then say it bites your finger your finger will come of and you normally have time to get away then you go to the hospital and bring the turtle that bit you and they will get your finger back and sow it back on it will be painful .
Usually only alligator snappers do, but I found a normal baby snapper in the water once
Here's a description of a snapping turtle: large head, long thick neck and back of shell has sawtooth edge. The height of the head end is a lot bigger than the tail end. There is a good picture on the "Nova Scotia Turtles" page of the Nova Scotia Museum of Natural History website. Scroll to the bottom of the Museum website and click Nova Scotia Nature; scroll to the bottom and click on Nova Scotia Turtles, Click on "fresh water turtles" and scroll down to Snapping turtle.
the average size of an alligator snapping turtle is 150 Lbs and 26 inches long.
The alligator snapping turtle is a freshwater turtle and the largest turtle by weight. The record for the largest ever caught weighed in at 400 pounds. They normally average between 155 and 175 pounds.
they dont have back bones they dont have back bones they dont have back bones they dont have back bones
Get on the alligator's back, and press downward on its neck while covering its eyes.
Pythons and other big snakes like boa constrictors, anacondas, and eagles eat alligators. Eighty percent of young alligators fall victim to birds and raccoons. Other predators include bobcats, otters, large bass, and larger alligators. Pythons are now battling the Alligator for top of the food chain in the Florida Everglades. Pythons are not indigenous to the area, but many have been abandoned there by people who no longer want them as pets. These Pythons and Alligators have been known to eat each other, but neither is known to be more dominant, it all depends on size. There was a famous picture taken a few years ago capturing an Alligator that was swallowed by a Python, then ate its way out of the back of the Python, neither animal survived.