Animals that eats a snapping turtle are coyotes, bears, river otters, American alligators and alligator snapping turtles.
Snapping turtles can be good for a pond although they can eat some healthy fish but also keep ponds healthy by consuming dead fish or diseased fish and other aquatic animals.
The diet of a snapping turtle consists of crayfish, insects, aquatic weeds, fish and carrion but also includes a higher proportion of fish.
Turtle shells are not bulletproof although they are hard enough to protect the turtle from predators but even some animals can bite through and break a turtles shell.
Animals that can break a turtle's shell are alligators, coyotes, raccoons, weasels, hawks and crocodiles.
As for sea turtles the sea turtle's shell is softer than the land turtle and whales and sharks are easily able to break the sea turtle shell.
A Jaguar can also break through a turtle shell as they have a bite strength of 1,500 PSI.
Turtles are completely attached to their shells.
It's impossible for the turtle shell to come off.
A turtles shell grows with the turtle.
A turtle shell is made up of 50 bones in the turtle's skeleton and includes the spine and rib cage.
There are 28 small plates around the edge of the turtle's shell, one for each day in the lunar month.
As well, there are 13 scutes or sections on the turtle's back, one for each of the moons in the year.
Each First nation has a unique understanding and a description of the 13 moons.
Turtles, or testudines, are reptiles of the order Testudines, characterized by a special shell developed mainly from their ribs.
Modern turtles are divided into two major groups, the Pleurodira and Cryptodira, which differ in the way the head retracts.
A turtle's lifespan depends on the species, but most aquatic species live into their 40s, PetMD reports.
Smaller species live only about a quarter of a century, and terrestrial box turtles typically live to 40 or 50 years but can live to be 100.