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Information on Terrapins and Turtles

Hey You made it! Great job! You have found one of the best online resources for your Pet Turtle.

This site has the basic information you need to care for your Pet Turtle, and answers for your questions. However, if you’re serious about providing the best possible care for your new pet, you absolutely must get the Turtle Guide Book. Not only is this our Product of the Month, it’s packed full of great turtle facts, care and treatment instructions, and diet information.

You’ll find everything you need to know in order to make your new Pet Turtle feel right at home. You can find great tips and techniques for creating your Pet Turtle’s habitat, including suggestions for the dry area and wet area. Did you know that turtles can live up to forty or fifty years old? Your pet’s going to be with you for most of your life. Don’t they deserve the best possible care you can give them?

The Turtle Guide Book will help you provide just that and more!

Information on Terrapins and Turtles

Let’s get our first fun fact cleared up right at the beginning – turtles are reptiles, not amphibians. Sure they’re equally happy in both land and water – except for tortoises that will drown if put in deep water – but this does not make them amphibians. In fact, turtles are pretty unique as reptiles as the only ones to actually grow an external shell made of bone! And it seems all that calcium goes right into that shell because turtles don’t have teeth. They’ve got a pretty sharp beak that will take your finger right off if you’re not fast enough but then, you are faster than a turtle right?

All living turtles belong to the crown group Chelonia and there about 300 species existing today, although a fair few are on the endangered list. Turtles are local to every continent, except Antarctica, and every ocean, except the Arctic. Wondering why they don’t live in the coldest regions? You guessed it! As reptiles, turtles are cold-blooded and hence cannot generate their own body heat. But literally everywhere else you look you’re likely to find turtles and this is probably because they’re one of the oldest living species of reptile, having been around for about 215 million years.

The turtle’s shell is called its ‘exoskeleton’ which basically means the ‘outer skeleton’ made of bone. The turtle exoskeleton, or shell, grows out from its ribs to fuse with the backbone and is formed of large plates called scutes. The upper part of the shell is called the carapace and the lower part is called the plastron. This lower belly is how you tell the males and females apart. In males, the plastron is concave while in the females it is flat. Not all turtle shells are hard. In fact, some are downright ‘soft’ earning some turtles the name ‘leatherback.’ (The leatherback sea turtle, by the way, grows to be one of the largest turtles in existence at around two meters long.)

Another little known fact about turtles is their well-developed sense of sight and smell. This, second to their shells, is their greatest defense against predators. If they can see or smell an attack far away enough they can drag themselves into safety under mud, water or a large rock before the predator gets close enough to do some real damage. The pancake tortoise, for instance, has a soft-shell but this helps it much more than a hard shell would by allowing it to squeeze into rock crevices to escape attack.

All turtles and tortoises breathe water and although they can go for extended periods of time underwater eventually they all must resurface. This includes the Australian freshwater turtle which has a most fascinating feature near its cloacal cavity. These are the blood-rich papillae that are able to absorb dissolved oxygen straight from water, similarly to fish gills, allowing it to stay underwater much longer than many of its counterparts.

Turtles are extremely fascinating creatures and the more information you find out about them, the more you want to know. Keeping one as a pet entails knowing a lot more than you would need to know about other animals but it is definitely well worth the effort. Look up turtles and turtle facts online, in books, at pet-shops – find out everything you can before getting one as a pet but do get one if you’ve been thinking about it. They make great pets!



Click here to get your Turtle Guide for a limited time price of just $18.45


Pet Turtle Care Tip #1

Turtles are members of the Reptile family and they are some of the oldest living creatures on the planet. They have been around for more than two hundred million years. This makes them as old as the dinosaurs. There are hundreds of different kinds of turtles all over the planet.

Pet Turtle Care Tip #2

Sea turtles are the most popular of all of the turtles. These are also some of the largest creatures—some sea turtles can grow to more than six feet in length and weigh hundreds of pounds. Scientists think that sea turtles are actually land creatures that went back into the water and never came out. Over time their limbs evolved to make them stronger swimmers and to keep them in the water: their front appendages are actually flippers.

Pet Turtle Care Tip #3

All turtles, even sea turtles, are air breathing creatures. While some turtles can stay under the water for hours at a time, they all must surface at least once a day to stay alive. There is one turtle, the giant turtle that only has to surface once a day to take in air. There are some studies being done to see if some species of turtle might be able to draw oxygen from their cells much like some fish use their gills to breathe.

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