They lay about five or six depending on the sprim
Great except I watched our red earred slider dig for an hour, lay her eggs, and upon unearthing them before the raccoons did, I counted 17 eggs. Must have been a lot of "sprim" eh? I am more concerened about the home made incubator temperature of the Protected sandy nest I have them in. (?)
SOMETIMES THEY LAY 1 OR 2 IT DEPENDS
Average clutch size can be anywhere from two to thirty eggs.
It depends, my turtles had about 6-7 eggs about 3 a day.
three to six
1 to 20
if it has 5 then its poisen
Many species of carnivores would prey upon these animals. Wading birds are just one example.
Well the red bellied wood pecker is a very interesting animal. It can have eighty six babies at one time. In a life time it can have over ninety babies.
Generally 2-20 per clutch.
a lot of cheese
Yellow bellied sliders carry many types of diseases.
Yes, red eared sliders and yellow bellied sliders are both subspecies of "pond slider", in the wild where their range overlaps they mate quite often producing what are called "intergrades". The particular intergrade between a yellow bellied slider and a red eared slider often has features of both, large yellow markings on the head with a red corner.
You can release it, but it may not survive because it has been a pet and not in the wild. This is the same for most wild animal's It is possible, just not the best. If you caught him from the wild, and have had him for less then a couple moths, it should be okay. If he is from a store, or you have had him for many years, I would say no.
Yes, many species. The pileated, red headed, red bellied, downy, hairy, and flicker, and red cockaded are year round residents, and the yellow bellied sapsucker is a winter visitor..The rare ivory billed may also reside there as well.
There are not too many 6-syllable animal names out there. However, there are some out there, and one of them is yellow-bellied marmot.
5 holes in a slider
there are 300 golden bellied capuchins left in the world