well turtles are not that slow but i am pretty sure the only protection is its shell
although a snapping turtle has its mouth
Garden snails need water for sure! Or else the poor things will dry up. Though they will shrink into their shells for protection, they can't do that forever. Sooner or later, they would starve to death if they don't dry to death. But garden snails cannot literally swim in water, so I don't suggest to put garden snails in large quantities of water.
Turtles, nothing else I know of.answer- it is called a turtle
turtles like to eat strawberries and clovers but I need to know what else they eat!
go somewhere else
Yes, snails love lettuce, but they will also eat anything else that is a fruit or vegetable as long as it's not citrus.
Class GastropodaSomething else. They are members of the mollusk class of Gastropoda.
Snails reproduce the same thing almost everything else does - they mate and lay eggs. Some snails are hermaphrodites, though (have both male and female sexual organs in the same individual), which means that two snails can fertilize each-other.
A blood worm eats fresh water snails and not much else
There may be more than 50,000 species of snails in the world, and each of these species are of three basic types, land snails, sea snails, and freshwater snails.Some types of snails include the Roman snail, the garden snail, and the giant African land snail. There are thousands of species of snails.
Here is a link for nutrition of turtles, if all else fails call the vet or the pet store to find out what they eat.
no, but they love everything else on it
No, a rabbit's pellets should not be contaminated by insects like snails. Keep your bunny's food in a dry, safe place where insects and animals won't get to it. Keep your rabbit's hutch or enclosure clean and dry: one snail moving through the hutch won't be a problem, but there should not be any kind of infestation. Snails generally like damp spots, and a rabbit's hutch should be bone dry or else the rabbit will get sick. See the related questions below for more info and helpful links.