horse cowland
The Common Musk Turtle, Sternotherus odoratus, is known as the stinkpot because of the bad smelling musk glands it uses for defense.
No. The musk turtle, also known as the stinkpot turtle, is not an endangered species.
Mostly the male stinkpot turtle would probably be much smaller then the female stinkpot just like in frogs the male is smaller than the female turle
buggs bunny and porky pig
4-5 inches,most male stinkpots grow to 4 inches.
The moris turtle
Harp Seals, Hooded Seals, Beluga Whales, Orcas, Humpback Whales, Bowhead Seals, Pacific White Sided Dolphins, Walruses, Gray Seals, Snapping Turtles, Leatherback Turtles, Stinkpot Turtle, Painted Turtle, and Blue Whale.
They are mostly found in parts of Southeast Canada and much of the Eastern part of the USA, (Which if you don't know, they are both in North America)
Yes - they have quite a good sense of smell.
In captivity stinkpots tend to favor carnivorous food items like aquatic turtle pellets, snails, earth worms, grasshoppers, crickets, ghost shrimp, small crayfish & commercial aquatic turtle pellets are taken.
# green turtle # box turtle # wood turtle # stinkpot turtle