Out
No, turtles bury their eggs in the soil on land.
No, turtles typically lay their eggs on land, not in water.
no, female turtles crawl up onto the shore and dig holes to lay their eggs. and when the eggs hatch, the baby turtles crawl down the beach into the water
Turtles lay eggs and therefore they 'hatch'. Turtles mate at sea and when the eggs are ready to be laid, the female comes ashore and digs a shallow nest in warm sand near the shore. She then returns to the water and never returns to the nest. After incubation the baby turtles hatch, scramble up out of the nest sand and make their way into the water.
In the bogs, or more specifically, warm, soggy, moist areas.
So they can return to the water
No. Semi-Aquatic Turtles like the Red eared Slider will only lay eggs on land, not under water.
Snapping turtles are not mammals, but reptiles. Turtles lay eggs, which mammals don't, that are able to survive out of water
If turtles lay eggs underwater, the eggs will not survive as they require oxygen to develop properly. Turtles typically lay their eggs on land in a nest to ensure the eggs have access to oxygen and the right conditions for incubation.
Unfortunately not, unless you have an appropriate soil area out of the water for the eggs to be laid.
Turtles lay chicken eggs (just kidding just kidding) turtles lay turtle eggs......
It is safer to lay them buried in the sand, and turtles breathe air and do not have gills to survive for that long in the water, either.