Sea turtles do not breathe like fish, instead, they respire using lungs. This requires them to surface often enough to acquire enough oxygen for living. A sea turtle does not need to breathe as much as other air-breathing animals, however, as they can withstand a much higher carbon dioxide concentration in their blood.
Loggerhead sea turtles breathe with lungs. Unlike fish that use gills to extract oxygen from water, sea turtles must surface to inhale air through their lungs. They can hold their breath for extended periods while diving, but they need to come up for air regularly.
No, sea turtles have lungs that can quickly refill when they come up to breathe on the surface of the water. Green and Loggerhead turtles can hold their breath for about 4 to 5 minutes during a routine activity. But Loggerheads are known for longer dives.
Turtles don't breathe under water. They've got lungs - not gills. They hold their breath when they dive.
This is actually a hard question to answer. Because Turtles can actually diffuse oxygen from the water with what is commonly referred to as Bum Gills. They aren't actually gills, but have the similar function.
i dont know or care
no they dont have any camouflage of their enviroment
well since sea turtles rarely sleep they really dont but if they do they will sleep on a nearby beach
Sea otters do not have gills because they are mammals.
They have gills and tubular feet
Shells, and some turtles have gills while others do not.
apperintly u dont now it is 10ft
The largest sea turtles are the leatherbacks