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I got my yellow bellied slider turtle at a flee market for $10. it was at Rodger's flee market in Ohio. now the red eared sliders r almost anywhere u look.
I wouldn't suggest it.
They are basically the same thing but yellow bellied sliders are more commonly said as the name of the turtle. Yes they are the same. Look it up, y do want to know, it doesn't make a difference, of how you say it they are the same thing.
A general age guess can be gained by simply looking at the size of the turtle. Yellow bellied and red ear sliders will reach approximately the size of a dinner plate when full grown.
Yellow belly sliders grow just under 1 foot in length.
Yes, yellow belly sliders are very good swimmers even when babies.
maybe your turtle is following the frog keep the frog in a separate cage if it is not following the frog its probably very safe
I don't think there is such a thing as a yellow eared slider. Try looking up yellow bellied sliders. That's probably what you're looking for.
The red eared slider does, but the yellow bellied slider does not.
20g
Yes, yellow-bellied sliders (Trachemys scripta scripta) can eat crickets.Specifically, yellow-bellied sliders are omnivores: they do not favor just one food group or prey. For example, they will eat plants from the pond and vegetables from the dinner table as well as fish in bite-sized portions. Additionally, they are insectivores: they eat insects, a class that includes crickets (Gryllidae family).
The plastron is the part of the shell that faces the ground; it is the part protecting the turtle's abdomen. In the case of a yellow-bellied turtle such as a slider or cooter (as a hobbyist, I've had 2 MS yellow-bellied cooters in my life and I think they're great turtles), the plastron is in fact its yellow belly. Hope it helps.