none dog.
You should feed your painted turtle about every day but not too much or your turtle can get sick.
In order to find out the amount of the turtle you need to know what kind of turtle you want. If you want a painted turtle it would be about $24.99, painted turtles are really friendly. If you were wanting a tortoise Greek Tortoise are really nice but are high priced, about $99.99
snails,slugs,flys,ants,butterflys,dragonflys,great diving beetles and much more
1 pound turtle you might not want to be handing much from the salmonella but when they grow up they eat meat. Like small fish can work fine. Cut up hotdogs works to.
A Painted Turtle can only "procreate" (have young) with another Painted Turtle but they have been known to "mate" (have sex) with Red Eared Sliders and Yellow Belly Sliders. They probably wouldn't try to mate with any other kind of turtle, other than a similar species of water turtle like maybe a Map Turtle. For instance, a painted Turtle probably would not try to mate with a Soft Shell Turtle or a Snapping Turtle (or any land turtle like a Box Turtle) because they would not recognize it as a possible mate. When a Painted Turtle tries to mate with a Slider, it is because its instincts are telling it that based on size, shape, and mating displays and behaviors, etc., it is another Painted Turtle. Interestingly, Red Eared Sliders and Yellow Bellied Sliders rages currently overlap and where they do there is a lot of unsuccessful mating going on between the two species but they cannot procreate. That is part of the "definition" of a separate species.
a turtle should eat as much seafood as a turtle can but not so much seafood that the turtle is sick
Painted turtles...like many other turtles are simi-aquatic. Which means that they require land and water. They need some place to swim and they also need some place so they can get out and dry off under a heat lamp of some kind.
turtles hibernate during the colder months of the year. it may not be eating as much as usual, if at all, and sleeping more than usual because it has gone into hibernation. this is usually nothing to worry about. if you're still concerned about your turtle, don't hesitate to take him to the veterinarian.
Depends on the turtle species.
A pet turtle can be about a 50 years old.
it depends on what kind of shelter
Edvard Much :)