To lure fish into striking range by wriggling it.
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A tortoise certainly can because I have seen my neighbours tortoise do this (a little way) when eating a tomato. Regarding turtles, although I have hand fed a wild turtle while diving in the ocean, I have not seen a turtle do this - (However, this does not mean that they can't).
turtles
snap
yes
They snap at their food when they eat
Some turtles do like bubbles. Since they do not always know what it is they snap at it thinking it is food.
Alligator snapping turtles are larger and have much stronger bites. Alligator snapping turtle also live longer than common snapping turtles. Alligator snapping turtles can live to be 100 at the longest while the common snapping turtle lives to be around 70 at the maximum. Alligator snapping turtles have smaller shells and bigger heads. Common snapping turtles have the oppisite.
Snapping Turtles will snap because it is their way of protecting themselves from enemies and their prey. The animals and their prey, therefore get scared and leaving the turtle alone. It is in their nature for snapping turtles to snap.
it hides underwater then when its prey take a drink snap
Nope - they do that just by instinct.
turtles should be the enemies because they could snap you
I think a Kodiak could pick up an alligator and chomp it right in the abdomen and that would be all of the alligator. On the other hand, the alligator, when picked up by the bear might snap around and take the bear's paw off rendering the bear helpless in controlling the alligator.