Well, as a matter of fact, it is thought and believed that sea turtles do have tails, but, they are occasionally (more often then not) hidden within their shells -being that they are so small. Occasionally, the tails can be seen, but can still be hard to spot due to their size. :)
A fish is a fish but a lobsteris a crustacean !! hope that helps
Twist off the head and tail, then peel off the shell around the body.
Masculine turtles usually:* have (slightly) concave plastron * have a bigger tail
Of course Star toto do have a tail & based on their tial one can decide whether the toto is male or female... But its difficult to suggest unless toto reaches at 4-5 years of its age
The Galapagos tortoise
A leopard tortoise. :)
ALL KINDS of reptiles are vertebrates, which means that they have a backbone. A turtle's backbone is connected to its shell.
...Tortoise.
you draw the tortoise and then rub out its body
The word tortoise forms a regular plural, tortoises.
Many, though not all, species of tortoises are sexually dimorphic, though the differences between males and females vary from species to species. In some species, males have a longer, more protruding neck plate than their female counterparts, while in others the claws are longer on the females. In most tortoise species, the female tends to be larger than the male. Some believe that males grow quicker, while the female grows slower but larger. The male also has a plastron that is curved inwards to aid reproduction. The easiest way to determine the sex of a tortoise is to look at the tail. The females, as a general rule have a smaller tail which is dropped down whereas the males have a much longer tail which is usually pulled up and to the side of the rear shell.
A Tortoise.