Turtles glide without doing much work with their body, while tuna on the other hand use all of their strength to sort of paddle through rough current waters.
Turtles are mostly aquatic or marine reptiles with a streamlined body and shell for swimming also has webbed feet. Tortoises on the other hang are slow walking land reptiles with domed shells
Tuna sleep in the ocean and keep on swimming during the sleep to avoid suffocation.
yes turtles can swim in a swimming pool unless you have clorokx then you canot have them in ur pool
Swimming
swimming
tuna, dolphins, turtles
Tuna can be mostly found swimming alongside or underneath of dolphins. This has made it unsafe for dolphins because they get caught in the nets made for Tuna.
swimming
the bluefin tuna does not find shelter. in order for it to breath, the tuna must keep swimming, as it does not have the capability to pump water over its gills on its own.
Fish and turtles differ primarily in their classification and anatomy. Fish are aquatic animals that belong to the class Actinopterygii and have gills for breathing underwater, fins for swimming, and scales covering their bodies. Turtles, on the other hand, are reptiles from the order Testudines; they have lungs for breathing air, a hard shell for protection, and limbs adapted for either swimming or walking on land. Additionally, turtles are ectothermic (cold-blooded), while fish can vary in their thermoregulation strategies.
There are several types of baby turtles, including sea turtles, freshwater turtles, and land turtles. They can be distinguished from each other based on their physical characteristics, such as the shape of their shells, the size of their flippers, and the habitat they live in. Sea turtles have flippers for swimming in the ocean, while freshwater turtles have webbed feet for swimming in lakes and rivers, and land turtles have sturdy legs for walking on land.
Yes. Tuna, sharks, swordfish, sea turtles and a species of Pacific salmon.