Can you keep turtles at home?

Soft-shelled turtles at home are raised according to their own preferences. However, although soft-shelled turtle is a family in the classification of turtles, it is basically spirituality-free, and it is no fun to associate with people. It's too wild to tame, and it won't have feelings for human beings after being raised for more than ten years. If you don't mind this, you can keep it.

Feeding mode:

Change feeding to feeding, because the tortoise can accept the owner's food but not the tortoise, and it only moves when people are away at night, so throw the diced shrimp and fish into the tank, and there are about four turtle claws at a time.

Tortoise:

Commonly known as "turtle", "water fish", "tuanyu" and "tortoise" Turtles are reptiles and amphibians with almost the same habits as fish. The difference is that it breathes with lungs instead of gills. The turtle's body is approximately round, the back is made of nails made of bones, the center is slightly convex, the outside is covered with a layer of skin, and the chest is composed of bone fragments and cartilage; Short and powerful limbs, webbed toes; The neck is thick and long, elastic, and the head is small, which is similar to the neck thickness, and the head and neck can be retracted into the shell at any time; He has a big mouth, bony teeth, a strong jaw and is good at biting people. It is a weapon for foraging and self-defense. The back nail, head and neck are muddy brown, and the abdomen is white and green. Turtles are widely distributed. Except for a few areas in the west, Heilongjiang, Songhua River, Liaohe River, Luanhe River, Yellow River, Yangtze River, Qiantang River, Minjiang River and Pearl River systems, as well as some lakes, reservoirs and wild ponds, especially in the middle and lower reaches of the Yangtze River, all have their traces. The tortoise is a carnivorous reptile, and sometimes it eats vegetarian bait. Usually eat fish and shrimp, but also eat benthic mollusks and crustaceans; In the silent night, I often go ashore for food, hunt ants and other bait on the shore, and also prey on frogs and toads. The bait for turtle fishing is generally pig liver, dog liver, diced fish and mutton strips.