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10 Things You Might Not Have Known About Turtles
You have just installed your lovely pet turtle in its paludarium. It may still be shy and hiding under its piece of driftwood, but in a while you’ll find it paddling happily in the warm water and hauling out now and then to warm up in the…
10 Things You Might Not Have Known About Turtles #1
They’ve been basically unchanged for 157 million years.
Why mess around with a nearly perfect body plan? Turtles and their relatives, the terrapins and the tortoises are descended from ancient reptiles called the chelonians, the only…
10 Things You Might Not Have Known About Turtles #2
They have thick skulls.
Turtles are anapsids, which means their skulls are solid save for openings for their eyes and nostrils.
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10 Things You Might Not Have Known About Turtles #3
Scientists divide turtles into how they retract their heads into their shells.
Turtles who bend their necks vertically are called Pleurodira, while those that bend their neck back vertically are called Cryptodira. When the neck is…
10 Things You Might Not Have Known About Turtles #4
Ancient turtles were huge.
The largest of the freshwater turtles was actually called Stupendemys. This beast lived in South America during the Pliocene epoch and was nearly 11 feet long. Testudo atlas, a land tortoise, was the biggest land…
10 Things You Might Not Have Known About Turtles #5
Turtles have no teeth, but they used to.
Turtles lost their teeth about 200 million years ago. Now they have beaks that are lined with quite sharp ridges. Even a hatchling can deliver a surprisingly potent nip.
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10 Things You Might Not Have Known About Turtles #6
The shell is actually part of the animal’s spine and ribs.
The upper part of the shell is called the carapace and the lower part is called the plastron. The outer layer is covered with scales called scutes. Scutes are part of the turtle’s…
10 Things You Might Not Have Known About Turtles #7
Shells are useful, but they make it hard to breathe.
Since the animal’s body is enclosed in the shell, they don’t breathe like other animals do by expanding and contracting their ribs. The ribs, as we now know, are part of the rigid shell.…
10 Things You Might Not Have Known About Turtles #8
Turtles have surprisingly good vision.
Their night vision is especially acute, because they have lots of rods in their eyes. These are cells that help an animal see in low light. Turtles also have an abundance of cone cells, which let them…
10 Things You Might Not Have Known About Turtles #9
Turtles don’t grow old.
Unlike other animals such as humans, the internal organs of turtles don’t seem to wear out over time. Scientists have noticed that the viscera of a 100 year old tortoise are as fresh as those of a young one.…