View allAll Photos Tagged Turtle,
Fred wanted to go underneath the fence, but couldn't, so husband pulled the fence up,so he could go where he needed to go.....see ya buddy!
Growing up in Florida, we always called these 'Streaked Head Turtles". Photo taken in the canal behind my house (Lake Pierce) Polk County, Florida.
A pair of green sea turtles / honu (Chelonia mydas) nuzzle up to each other while sunbathing in the Papahanaumokuakea Marine National Monument.
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Photo by: Mark Sullivan, NOAA Fisheries Hawaiian Monk Seal Research Program, 2013
Seen along the Illinois and Michigan Canal path, this painted turtle was hiding from us as we tried to photograph him.
Notice how the stripes on his head go right through his eye.
And his dirty mouth!!
Spotted Turtle (Clemmys guttata) found crossing the road at Heislerville Wildlife Management Area, Cumberland county, New Jersey.
Look at how tiny he is. Those aren't big rocks next to him, those are tiny pebbles. We saw him on our walk at Independence Grove.
haven't been uploading as i have mocks & exams. here is a photo i took of a turtle during my visit to Bournemouth aquarium. i'm drawing it for my mock exam in art. turtles are amazing!
I was out for a walk in Lambton Woods and I heard a woman scream...
I ran up and the woman pointed to this snapping turtle crossing the walking path which she almost stepped on.
This guy was quite large and was crawling out of the woods back down to the river. Nothing could stop him! It was very to cool to watch him crawl over logs and plow through shrubs and tumble down some stairs. Those claws!
Notice the dog trying to sneak up on him (he was off the leash and was asking to get bit!).
Hawaiian Green Sea Turtles (honu), apparently uniquely among sea turtles, sometimes bask on the beach during the day. This is turtle L-2, HiwaHiwa, done basking at "Turtle Beach" (Laniakea, Oahu) and heading back out into the ocean.
(Pseudemys rubriventris); listed as a threatened species in Pennsylvania
With an adult size of 10 to 12 inches and weighing up to 10 pounds, the northern red-bellied turtle is larger than most freshwater turtles except the snapping turtle.
His shell appeared to be crusted with mud, and he does not have many of the usual markings on his head, just some stripes under his chin. Older red-bellied turtles will become "melanistic" (uniformly dark gray or black); also, males especially may be almost entirely black, but there is usually a trace of reddish lines on the medially flattened upper shell and yellowish head stripes. The tip of the upper jaw is notched with toothed cusps on each side. The lower shell ranges in color from coral-pink to red, with darker markings in the young.
In Pennsylvania, the threatened red-bellied turtle lives in the most developed and densely populated southeast corner of the state. This large, long-lived, colorful turtle lives in coastal streams, rivers and wetlands along the eastern seaboard, but nests on land, making survival difficult for eggs and hatchlings. The greatest threat to the turtles is the industrialization and pollution of their environment. The large, aquatic turtles need to have access to deep stream channels and wetlands, because young turtles eat lots of insects. The adults are nearly exclusively herbivorous and feed on a wide variety of aquatic plants.
A series of shots follow…
Come out of your shell. Cuaght him/her trying to cross the Paint Creek Trail in Lake Orion, Michigan.
Emydoidea blandingii
April, 2011. Clare County, Michigan.
An adult female Blanding's Turtle that was found in a prairie fen on northern Michigan. The red stain of its carapace is due to the tannins from nearby Cedar Trees.