Turtles can grow anormas. All types of sizes there are so many types also.
common musks generally reach 3-4 inches at full maturity as do 3 striped muds and Mississippi muds. And some male basking species stay under 4 inches like Texas and cagles maps.
musk turtles can grow to be 5 to 7 in long full grown and can be kept in a 5 gallon tank
As there are over six hundred species of turtles ranging in size from 4 inches to 7 feet long, there are many different sizes of hearts for turtles.
Small
Turtles have a bony shell that covers the top and the bottom of their body. The can be rounded, flat, or some shapes in between. Many turtles have long necks and turtles come in many different sizes.
all turtles have a somach
Turtles and Tortoises have highly similar DNA, as tortoises are a subgroup of turtles.
Answer: That is not entirely true. Wild turtles can be small and domesticated turtles can be large. Large turtles are very old and take a long time to get to those large sizes.
As there are over six hundred species of turtles ranging in size from 4 inches to 7 feet long, there are many different sizes of hearts for turtles.
Dead turtles or live? You can find babies at pet stores and just look around to see if there's anything bigger.
Turtles are not inherently social creatures. Keeping turtles of vastly different sizes together is often a bad idea because the larger turtle(s) are capable of causing serious injuries to the smaller turtles if they feel their territory is not being respected. (and often the whole tank is "their" territory!) I have successfully kept small turtles with small turtles and large turtles with other large turtles, but mixing sizes often results in disaster. I would recommend moving the smaller turtle into a new habitat either for the rest of its life or at least until it's large enough to try putting it with the other turtle(s) again.
Small
Turtles have a bony shell that covers the top and the bottom of their body. The can be rounded, flat, or some shapes in between. Many turtles have long necks and turtles come in many different sizes.
No. Different kinds of turtles eat different foods, require different water temperatures to live in, and produce different amounts of eggs. And of course, they come in many different shapes and sizes.
No they do not because once they grow to full sizes they stop, although they can die of too less or too much food
Bog turtles are land turtles and land turtles. They are mostly land turtles.
no, hawksbill turtles are sea turtles
Yes, much larger turtles can hurt and even kill smaller turtles.Turtles need lots of space so if you have an over crowded tank you need to separate them. Not necessarily. If your turtles have an appropriate amount of space they will happily exist with new additions to their group. However, if you are keeping turtles in an aquarium and in very unnatural surroundings, the stress alone of their situation often results in cannibalism. If the turtles are of the same species, it is extremely rare for larger turtles to kill smaller ones. This is an inherent instinct that helps to ensure the survival of the species. I have, in my 30+ years of breeding turtles and tortoises, found that larger turtles may attack smaller turtles of a different species, either in combat or for food. For this reason, you should never mix turtle species in a habitat without paying careful attention to the difference in their sizes.
they are turtles