No.
The long neck turtles live in Eastern Australia. The long neck turtle can live for as long as a 100 years.
The short-neck turtle lives in areas all over Australia. They are freshwater turtles that are native to Australia. Short-neck turtles can survive in the wild and in captivity.
Most definitely not.
uhhh....yes of course
African side neck turtles come from Africa but sometimes when there imported to where you are, it depends where you live. my African side neck lives in water and can breath on land so you could also find them at ponds two and some types of warm water.
No. I just buried my African Clawed Frog due to yellow bellied turtles attacking him.
Because long neck turtles are slow on land.
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The lifespan of an African side neck turtle can reach above 25 years of age. These reptiles live in lakes, rivers and shallow pools.
Mine do not need a tank. They use shoulder mounted missles and Predator aircraft.
Every turtle is endangered including aquatic turtles and the other land turtles. All the turtles that live in the sea are definitely endangered by mostly all of the fishing nets. Aquatic turtles are endangered from people disturbing them or even destroying their habitat. If people really love turtles they should adopt one and keep them in captivity to try and make them not endangered anymore.Short neck turtles are endangered along with all the other turtles that exist. You can stop making turtles endangered by telling people to stop with the fishing nets and make more people adopt them to bring them in captivity and make the turtles live their hole life. Every 10 minuets their is one turtle dying from something like habitat disturbance or those fishing nets. Make a difference, do the right thing and if you can adopt one to prevent them to die and make turtles not be endangered.
poisonous frogs