No. Depending on the size of the snake, it may eat the turtle, and depending on the species of the turtle, it might eat the snake. It's not recommended that you house different types of animals in the same enclosure because they each have special needs, which could harm the other one. But if you have a small, non-venomous snake, and a medium sized non-carnivorous turtle, then they more than likely would not kill each other.
Yes they should because turtles and turtoises are very much alike.
Many turtles prey upon frogs, so it is not a good idea to mix. Plus mixing amphibian and reptile is a bad idea in itself.
Yes because they are both land dwellers.
No - they are turtles - unrelated to tortoises.
Box turtles can close their shells tortoises can't.
Tortoises, box turtles and mud turtles are all found in deserts of North America.
Most likely yes, but depending on the species of box turtle, and you must have a spacious terrarium or outdoor pen.
Box Turtles.
I would have to say NOOOOO!! snappers are aggressive and bit a lot and get much BIGGER than box turtles.also box turtles are land turtles and snappers are almost fully aquatic
Some tortoises have been known to live over 100 years but the average turtle lives about 30 (red eared slider) to 80 (sea turtles and box turtles).
Certain breeds do. It depends on what kind of habitat a particular breed is comfortable with. I used to have box turtles which lived outside and hibernated in the winter. Now I have leopard tortoises, which originated in africa, so they do not hibernate.
It really depends on how much they know about turtles and how responsible they are
Not all turtles are herbivores. Snapping turtles, for example, commonly eat fish or frogs. Many species of turtle, such as Russian tortoises, do mostly consume vegetation but will occasionally consume worms or insects.
Depends..... Box Turtles=70-80 years Tortoises=120 years
There are about 270 species of turtles and their life spans vary considerably. Small pond turtles may live for up to 30 years, larger species such as snapping turtles for 60 years or more, box turtles for about 100 years, and giant tortoises in captivity may live for 200 years or more.