Yes, while there isn't much blood flow near the surface, there is enough that leeches will attach to the shell and feed.
yes.
Blood worms,feeder fish and stuff like that
Only a few species of turtles have cloacal bursae that are rich in blood vessels and can be used for gas exchange. The vast majority of turtle species do not either have these cloacal bursae, or if they do, they cannot use them for gas exchange. Please refer to the end of the article I am added to related links.
all turtles have a somach
Turtles and Tortoises have highly similar DNA, as tortoises are a subgroup of turtles.
This order includes all turtles and tortoises. It is divided into three suborders: Pleurodira (side-necked turtles), Cryptodira (freshwater turtles, snapping turtles, tortoises, soft-shelled turtles, and sea turtles), and Amphichelydia (a suborder of turtles that is now extinct).
hot blood
turtles
I don't see why not. Diabetes is when blood sugar rates and insulin levels are off in a persons body. Turtles can not affect that in any way, they're just animals. People's pet turtles can't raise their blood sugar.
Some where near 50
Blood worms,feeder fish and stuff like that
No, turtle blood won't heal a wound any faster than human blood, which under normal conditions should already be in the wound. Just let your body do what it does and heal on its own, and don't go hurting any turtles for folk magic.
Most definitely not.
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles - 2003 Bad Blood 6-12 was released on: USA: 2 December 2006 USA: 2 December 2006
Sailors used turtles as a supply of fresh meat because, when they ran out of meat, turtles are the only supply of meat in the ocean that don't have a high level of mercury in their blood (which can cause someone to get sick or die).
They do not. They are normal reptiles that have blood similar to humans.
Bog turtles are land turtles and land turtles. They are mostly land turtles.
There could be blood in the turtle tank because they have bit one another. A little blood in the water goes a long way. Turtles will heal fine in the water, if the condition persists, see a veterinarian.