a tortise has several different habitats it depends on its species many tortoises live in deserts and otheres in wide open spaces where alot of food fruits and leaves can be found for them to feed on
Grassland, rocks, mud, heat
As long as you create a proper habitat for your red footed tortoise to live in, keeping it indoors for the first few years shouldn't be a problem. They can live to be 50 years old.
the tortoise
the tortoise eat pegeounus
The tortoise is the land-dweller. Turtles are primarily aquatic.
He is a Galapagos Tortoise
deserts area
The habitat of the Pinta island tortoise is basically a place called the Pinta island
wildfires, humans, loss of habitat
a dry place with a lot of heat or a desert
Due to illegal trade and habitat destruction.
Make sure there in a good habitat so it will increase
Alden Sievers has written: 'Recommendations for management of the desert tortoise in the California desert' -- subject(s): Protection, Wildlife habitat improvement, Desert tortoise, Endangered species
As long as you create a proper habitat for your red footed tortoise to live in, keeping it indoors for the first few years shouldn't be a problem. They can live to be 50 years old.
You cannot crossbreed tortoises. Each species of tortoise has a gut flora peculiar to that species. The gut flora of one species can prove dangerous to another species.Different species of tortoise should not be kept together. While a very few, in the wild, may cross into each others habitat on occasions, such as the Hermann (Testudo hermanni) and the Horsfield (Testudo horsfieldii) they are not known to interbreed.
Desert tortoises are found in the dry, hot deserts of the American southwest and Mexico, primarily in the Sonoran and Mojave Deserts.
Desert tortoises live in the hot ojave and Sonoran deserts. They spend about 95% of their lives in underground burrows to escape the heat.
Desert Tortoises can be found in Mojave and Sonoran Deserts of Southeastern California, Southern Nevada, South through Arizona into Mexico.(: