There are different types of turtles. Aquatic turtles mainly live in the sea. Terrestrial turtles live on land. There are also other types of turtles that live in both water and land, like snapping turtles for example.
They hatch on land, but as soon as they hatch, they waddle staight out to the ocean. The nests in which they are laid in is on a beach right near the ocean.
It actually depends on what type of turtle it is for example a sea turtle lives in the ocean.
Tortoises spend most of their lives on land, venturing into water to drink or bathe. They are not good swimmers and can easily drown if caught in a swift current.
Land land land land
Mostly in the water
Tortoises and Turtles are both in the reptilia genus and both have similarities but tortoises live on land wile turtles live in water.
Yes, the cheetah is a land animal.
Apart form the fact that they hatch on land and therefore have to make their way to the ocean to start with, yes.
any animal that is required by its life cycle to spend part of its life in water and part on land. Think frog. Begins life in water as tadpole, then continues to land, then back to water for reproduction.
Turtles are adapted to an aquatic life, spending almost all their life at sea. They only come to land to lay their eggs - which need to be laid out of water so they can develop.
Polar bears eat seals, and seals are found in the sea.
Because amphibians spend its early life in water and it's adult life on land
Their eggs are laid IN the the sand, so, yes :( Turtles do need land because they arent like fish with gils so they need to breath above water, like humans they dont live in the water everyday.
In general yes. Some turtles spend their whole life at sea ... except to come ashore to lay their eggs.
They are INSECTS
While similar (both have shells) the tortoise lives on land, and is a herbivore. The turtle lives in water, and is an omnivore. They can be distinguished by the shape of their shells- turtles are streamlined for swimming and diving, tortoises are dome shaped.
Amphibians spend part of life cycle in water and the remainder on land...with occasional dunks in water. See frogs, toads, newts and salamanders.