Thursday, February 28, 2013

Why Can't I Be You?

mama, get sewing up that new harness for me!

Monday, February 25, 2013

Terrapin Salad


Saturday, February 23, 2013

Chilled Turtle Soup

If she doesn't warm this tank up soon, I may become a snapper just for the heck of it.

Thursday, February 21, 2013

Slowskys Behind the Scenes


Monday, February 18, 2013

My Cousin: Golden Coin Turtle

The Golden Coin Turtle or Chinese Three-Striped box turtle is a species of turtle endemic to southern China.

He's a happy hatchling!
The species is considered critically endangered due to its use in Chinese medicine, under threat because of unsustainable hunting. This is one of the most endangered turtle species in the world, according to a 2003 assessment by the IUCN.



Wednesday, February 13, 2013

My Cousin: The Blob

Sorry, buddy, I couldn't help myself. One look in the mirror and you'll see what I mean.
The Narrow-headed Softshell Turtle  This is one big turtle - up to 45 inches long and over 260 pounds! Like all softshell turtles, this one has a carapace (upper shell) covered with leathery skin, as opposed to the hard plates found on most turtle shells.

Found mainly in southern Asian countries like Pakistan, India and Malaysia, the narrow-headed softshell spends most of its time in the water, hanging out on the sandy bottoms of deep rivers. It buries itself in the sand and lies in wait for its prey. When a tasty-looking morsel happens by, the turtle shoots out its long neck with great speed and captures the unlucky victim. The turtle's favorite animal foods include fish, mollusks, crabs, shrimp; plants occasionally show up on the menu.

The narrow-headed softshell rarely leaves the water, except during nesting season. A female hauls herself onto a sandy beach and lays her eggs - 60 to 110 at a time!

Despite its relatively high reproductive rate, the narrow-headed softshell is in danger of extinction in the wild. The species is captured in huge numbers and sold as food or medicine in Asian markets.

Because of its habitat and habits (deep water, often submerged), much about the narrow-headed softshell remains a mystery.

Saturday, February 9, 2013

My Cousin: The Central American River Turtle


The Central American River Turtle survived the age of dinosaurs but is now at risk of being eaten to death by humans! Its prized meat is hunted from remote wetlands and served during religious celebrations. The turtle, one of nearly 350 species of freshwater turtles and tortoises found around the world, is apparently so “floppy” that it has a hard time leaving the water, preferring to nest under the surface during floods, according to Conservation International.


Tuesday, February 5, 2013

Hop On!

Little guy needs a ride

Saturday, February 2, 2013

Top 10 Weird Turtle Facts

10. That Shell isn't What it Seems
The Chelonian's shell, which is made up of about 50 different bones, actually is an evolutionary modification of the rib cage and part of the vertebral column.

The shell itself actually has two parts: an upper section, the carapace, and a lower portion called the pastron, which are joined by a bony bridge. Some turtles have a moveable joint, usually in the plastron, that acts as a hinge and enables the creature to pull the two shell sections together tightly while it retracts its body inside. Shells have nerves embedded in them and a blood supply as well, so if a turtle shell is injured, it may bleed and feel pain.

9. Tortoises Orbited the Moon Before Astronauts In September 1968, the Soviet Union launched the space probe Zond 5 on a mission to orbit the moon and test conditions as a prelude to a possible lunar mission by cosmonauts. Along with a life-size human mannequin equipped with radiation detectors, the spacecraft carried a number of living passengers, including a pair of Russian tortoises. After a week in space, Zond 5 returned to Earth and successfully splashed down in the Indian Ocean.

8. Alligator Snapping Turtles Lure Prey With Their Tongues One of the most fearsome Chelonians around is the alligator snapping turtle, Macroclemys temminckii, which is the biggest freshwater turtle in North America. It can grow to 2.5 feet long, can weigh as much as 200 pounds, and has powerful jaws, a sharply-hooked beak, nasty bearlike claws and a muscular tail. The alligator snapping turtle does eat some aquatic plants, but it's mostly a carnivore that dines on a variety of smaller creatures -- fish, frogs, snakes, worms, clams, crayfish and even other turtles.

The alligator snapping turtle catches prey by way of a fiendishly clever evolutionary adaptation: an appendage to its tongue that, when wriggled, looks like a worm. Fooled fish will swim right into range of the hungry predator's jaws.

7. They Make Sounds, Even Though They Lack Vocal CordsChelonians can make sounds by swallowing or by forcing air out of their lungs, and some species emit unique noises. The red-footed tortoise, a South American species, makes a series of clucks that sound like a chicken. Male Travancore tortoises in Southeast Asia emit a high-pitched whine that sounds like an electric motor when mating. The giant musk turtle found in Central America, is known for yelping like a dog when it is startled or being attacked.

But the weirdest sound is made by nesting female leatherback sea turtles (Dermochelys coriacea), who make a distinctly unladylike noise that resembles a human belch.

6. Males Select Potential Mates By Sniffing Tails
Male chelonians' method of sniffing under other female chelonians' tails is relatively sensible, not to mention functional. Since both males and females' sexual organs are hidden inside their cloaca, a cavity used for both reproduction and eliminating waste, humans have trouble telling by sight the sex of a turtle.

Turtles and tortoises, however, possess an extremely keen sense of smell. Males apparently can detect the scent of pheromones, a type of identifying chemical, that is secreted inside a female's cloaca.


5. They Don't Have Ears, But Can Perceive Low-Pitched Sounds
It's true that chelonians can't hear anywhere near as well as humans because they lack an ear opening, but they can detect certain types of sounds. Scientists have found that their middle ears have a very thick eardrum-like membrane, which limits the frequency range they can perceive. But that adaptation is extremely efficient for bone-conduction hearing at low frequencies, according to Behavior of Exotic Pets.

Our hard-shelled friends also can't differentiate loudness as well as we can. The spotted turtle, Clemmys guttata, for example, has a peak sensitivity of just 4 dB, compared to 120 dB in humans. Fortunately, their sense of hearing is good enough to detect the presence of predators.

4. Turtles Are Nearly As Old As The Dinosaurs

Amazingly, some turtles that existed in the age of the dinosaurs are still around. Pelomedusidae, a family of freshwater turtles native to eastern and southern Africa, first appeared about 120 million years ago. The first tortoises emerged on land at the start of the Tertiary Period 65 million years ago, shortly after the dinosaurs died out in a mass extinction. In the ocean, the oldest surviving species of sea turtles, the Cheloniidae, date back 55 million years, according to the book Turtles of the World.

3. Turtles Breathe Without A DiaphragmMost air-breathing vertebrates draw air in and out of their lungs using a diaphragm, a muscle that contracts and relaxes with each breath to expand the ribs. But turtles don't have a diaphragm, since the rigidity of their shells would prevent their ribs, which are connected to them, from expanding. Instead, turtles must move their limbs or neck, and utilize other muscles connected to the pleural cavity (the area around the lungs), to help them breathe.

2. They Have Favorite Colors
Our shell-wearing reptilians are visually-oriented creatures and rely on sight to identify other members of the same species, food, and potential danger, such as predators. Sea turtles, for example, are so dependent on sight that when researchers blindfolded some of them,
the animals were unable to find their way back into the water.

Research also shows that turtles not only can perceive colors, but that certain colors -- red, orange and yellow -- seem to be the most appetizing to them. When they see an object in one of those shades, they display "investigative behavior," which suggests that they're checking it out to see if they want to eat it.

1. There's A Turtle That Seems Part Skunk
The African helmeted turtle, Pelomedusa subrufa, is the most widespread turtle species in Africa, found just about everywhere south of the Sahara desert. It's a hunter-scavenger that hunts in packs and seems happy to eat most anything, from parasites lodged in the skin of rhinoceroses to young birds and small mammals. The helmeted turtle's reputation is also odorous as well. It smells really, really awful. That aroma comes from four glands, one under each leg, which release a foul-smelling liquid seems to repulse horses as well as humans.