I buy baby goldfish for my turtles. The ones that they don't catch in about an hour or so, somehow they become friends and never bother them. My leftover goldfish are now the size of Koi.
I wouldn't recommend it.
A tank is very expensive and probably restricted to use by military personelle. You could kill a red ear slider by much more economical means.
Yes you can, they are both variations of the same type of turtle. Just the same you can breed them to the albino.
a snake
Red Ear Sliders live in and around fresh water. In the unlikely event that a collector has in his/her possession a Bull Shark or a River Shark then the turtle would most certainly be eaten.
Yes you could if it in a big enough tank or pond.
As a rule of thumb, you should not feed your turtle anything bigger than his head. Aquatic or semi aquatic turtles can eat fish. However, if you have them in a tank, even with filtration, it can cause an oily film on the surface of the water.
your red ear slider isn't eating because they are timid animals and it is probaly scared of you try fider fish first if that dosent work the put in floating pellets and leave the room.
Yes, pond hyacinth is fine. Turtles can eat that plant.
Yes. The most common fish a Red Eared Slider will eat is Commet Goldfish. Red eared sliders will eat fish, but fish are full of worms and parasites which will contaminate your filter. For an indoor slider I suggest only pellets and veggies. Plus they eat parts of the fish and the rest you would have to clean out right away. My slider loves just his pellets, he snubs romaine lettuce and any other veggie I have tried. Ice berg lettuce is not good for sliders either. I have a 4 year old slider that is 5 inches long he is in a 40 gallon tank alone.
You should keep a baby red ear slider away from other pets like dogs and cats because they are small so keep them in a good tank with maybe other baby turtles
what will happen is that the baby false map turtle will get along with the red ear slider .B ut it will just take a will.