other red eared sliders and mayby goldfish.but 1 thing i know that live with red eared sliders are betta fish.becuse ive kept them together before several times.becuse i have ared eared slider and a male betta.
Red eared sliders are a mildly aggressive breed of turtle who dose not do well with other breeds and is best kept alone.
A RES is usually purchased at a very young age, when they are very small but they do not stay small for long. RES can live for 50+ years, the average adult female can grow to 12", the size of a large dinner plate. They get huge!
It is a myth that keeping a RES in a smaller habitat will prevent them from growing to large; the result of keeping them in a small container is stunted growth and pre-mature death.
In relation to their size, RES need a large aquarium, 20 gallons is nowhere near enough. Even 50 to 75 Gallon, wide, tank is to cramped for a full grown turtle. The average, full grown RES will need about 80 to 90 gallons to fit comfortably.
They enjoy swimming and spend about 80% of their lives in the water but also need dry land to rest and bask under a heat lamp on. A large, floating turtle dock works wonders.
RES need both a source of heat, weather a basking lamp or durable aquarium heater- Non break heaters work best, sense a broken heater can electrocute the turtle. They also need, at least, a 5.0 UVB lights that can not be overlooked. These lights produce UV rays that are essential for calcium and nutrient absorption. Placing the tank close to a window will not provide enough rays, sense glass flitters most UV rays out of the light.
A very strong filter is essential for good water quality and the overall health of the turtle. Without good filtration, an owner can expect to clean and change the water daily.
As for food, RES are omnivores and can eat almost anything. In spite of this fact, most foods are not healthy and should be avoided. Most RES love animal protein, fish, insects, raw meat, ext but the protein and fat content is to high and can cause obesity. Occasional feeder minnows and crickets are good treats. The only exception are babies which need more protein than adults. Avoid any kind of carp or goldfish! they produce a chemical that is toxic and, over exposure causes sever medical issues with all aquatic turtles.
Collard, Mustard, and dandelion greens, leaf lettuces (except iceberg!) Carrot slices, squash, green beans, apple pieces, bananas, and cantaloupe are all very popular, healthy foods for RES. Any fresh foods should be offered up and replaced daily. A high quality turtle pellet should be, at least 30% of their daily diet. Fresh aquatic plants are a fantastic source food but some can be toxic and should be chosen carefully.
There habitat is in open water where they are free to swim around and have a place for basking and basking means where they can have the sun light hit them.xD
Turtles do not engage in symbiosis.
yes,to fish.
No, these two animals cannot live together well. The turtle will often attack the crab in an effort to eat it, and it is not advisable for them to live in the same tank together.
It is natural for red eared sliders to shed, it only means they're growing! Take care of em the same as you'd treat a RES that isn't shedding at the time (:
in captivity 20 to 40 years with great care
sliders
no,but if after handeling the turtle,proper higienic care is not taken you may get contaminated with salmonella
how do pond sliders behave
The duration of Sliders is 2640.0 seconds.
Sliders was created on 1995-03-22.
Sliders ended on 1999-12-29.
There is no species called red eye sliders.
There is no such thing as a red eye slider, maybe you were trying to say redeared slider. (the red is not on it's eye, it is on it's ears) Common mistake. Check this website out. It tells you alot of things about the red eared slider. http://www.austinsturtlepage.com/Care/caresheet-red_ear_slider.htm
Turbo Sliders was created on 2003-04-16.