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ARE YOU SURE YOU WANT A SNAPPER?
Snapping turtles
are fascinating animals, and captives are relatively hardy with proper
care. However, the large size, long life, and aggressive nature of this
species deserve serious consideration.
Size: The carapace
length of common snappers frequently exceeds one foot with a record length
of 18 ½ inches (Pritchard). The average adult weight is thirty pounds, but
40-60 pounders are not uncommon (Dillon). Snappers grow fast! That 2-inch
baby you brought home to a ten-gallon aquarium can be 4 inches in one year
and 8 inches in two. It will eventually require either a pond setting or a
gigantic aquarium (more than a hundred gallons).
Messiness:
Snappers are both voracious eaters and highly aquatic. This combination
equals frequent water changes! The best filtration cannot keep up with
smelly snapper wastes. You must be prepared to do complete water changes
at least once a week if not more often.
Aesthetics: If you want a
beautiful tank landscaped with plants, you do not want a snapper! Your
little charge will rearrange the tank to his or her liking, uprooting
plants and pushing everything including rocks and the filter into new
positions. Snapper tanks must be kept simple.
Expense: The
initial investment for any turtle amounts to several hundred dollars for a
tank, filter, heater, UVB lighting, and a basking light. Larger tanks and
equipment for your eventual "behemoth" will cost much more.
Aggressiveness: Yes, it's true that snappers are more docile in
their aquatic environment than on land. They sit quietly and give you long
soulful stares - hungry stares!!! Snappers will eat anything including
your fingers! They charge their food, and your digits can easily be
mistaken for worms in a feeding frenzy. You cannot mix them with other
turtles including other snappers. Even small snappers can cause serious
harm to each other. They will also attempt to eat all the other
inhabitants of your prized outdoor pond, including ducks and ornamental
fish.
Longevity: The life span of the common snapper has been
estimated at 30-40 years (Dillon). Are you prepared to commit one third to
one half of your life to your friend? What if you move? If you are
thinking you can just release your turtle in a few years, remember that
most states still permit the harvesting of snappers. You wouldn't want
your buddy to end up in a can of soup! And zoos are "full up" with
unwanted snappers and other reptiles. Most are no longer accepting
ex-pets.
Please think twice and thrice before acquiring a
snapper. It is cruel to take home that cute baby on an impulse if you
cannot provide permanent quarters. Snappers are living, breathing beings
and not playthings. Please award them the compassion they
deserve.
BASIC CARE FOR SNAPPING
TURTLES By Jean
Adamson You have decided to
take the plunge! I hope the following care sheet will get you
started:
Tank
Setups
Glass Aquariums: You may temporarily keep your snapper in a
water-filled plastic container, but you will eventually need a glass
aquarium for your indoor accommodations. Some snapping turtles kept in
close confinement develop sores on their bottom shells from constant
abrasion with plastic, rocks, or other rough surfaces. The affected areas
will initially look more orange than the surrounding color and will
progress to pinhead-sized holes in the shell. Sores that do not heal with
corrective husbandry should be seen by a vet.
In addition, glass
enclosures allow your friend to look out. Your baby snapper that wants to
hide will soon turn into an intelligent, inquisitive juvenile that enjoys
"watching the world go by." If you house other turtles in aquariums, try
placing one end of your snapper's aquarium end-to-end with another
turtle's tank, but provide a place for retreat and privacy at the other
end.
Remember that your snapper is going to grow fast! A one-inch
baby will become a 7-inch juvenile in two years with the proper diet. Buy
the largest tank that you can presently afford. A rule of thumb is to
provide ten gallons of water for each one inch of snapper shell length.
Your ten-inch snapper is going to require a one hundred gallon tank. The
tank should be long and wide rather than tall to provide more swimming
area. Since a snapper will stay at the bottom of the tank most of the
time, a tank with shorter walls will facilitate rays from your lighting
source reaching your turtle. A 30 gallon "breeder' tank (12" high x 36"
long x 18" wide) makes a good first choice for a small
snapper.
Substrate/Covers: The author and some vets recommend a
completely bare-bottom tank, at least for beginners. Snappers are messy,
and you will have enough work changing all the water once a week without
also doing gravel washes. You will not need gravel to anchor plants or
decorations, because your snapper will uproot, rearrange, and eat
everything in the tank, including the gravel! Do not place plastic plants,
large marbles, or other decorative items in your snapper's tank if you do
not want a snapper with a life-threatening intestinal impaction! Snappers
in the wild bury themselves in mud at the bottom of marshes and lakes.
This environment may be simulated in an outside pond, but the author
hasn't experimented with soft substrates in indoor setups.
An older
snapper may eventually be able to crawl out of the tank. You may need to
buy a hood or screen cover or construct your own.
Hiding/Basking:
Your snapper, especially a baby, should be provided with a hiding place at
one end of the aquarium. The author recommends, however, that you do not
build a cave with rocks or pile up rocks in the tank. Your snapper is
powerful and may bring the whole structure down, pinning your turtle
underneath. A good hiding place can be fashioned from a small, plastic
kitty litter pan. Cut out one end of the pan, turn it upside down at the
end of the tank, and put a very large rock on top to hold it in place.
Another option the author has used in an 18-inch wide tank is a 17-inch
wide Rubbermaid kitchen stool placed widthwise with a rock on top. The
snapper feels secure under the stool but can still see out.
Wild
snappers usually stay submerged at the bottom of water bodies, but some
will bask by either floating at the surface or "hauling out" onto logs.
You can experiment with a basking spot by wedging a smooth piece of wood
between the aquarium walls and angling it up out of the water. Fasten a
clamp light fixture available at hardware stores to the tank rim with a 60
watt bulb (reptile or incandescent) a foot over the basking
spot.
Water Depth/Temperature: WATER DEPTH IS MOST IMPORTANT!
Snappers spend most of their time resting on the bottom and extending
their long necks up to get breaths just above the water surface as needed.
The depth should be at least a bit deeper than the turtle is wide to allow
for swimming and righting the body if turned over, but shallow enough to
allow for breathing from a resting position. If your snapper is forced to
swim to breathe, it may die from the energy expenditure. A hatchling
should be observed to see whether or not it can lift its head out to
breathe and the setup changed to include a dry slope if it is having
trouble.
Snapping turtles need a slightly cooler range of water
temperatures than that prescribed for some other species. They will feed
eagerly at 68 degrees F or above but become uncomfortable with water
temperatures in excess of 77 degrees F (Highfield). Submersible glass tube
heaters or other electrical appliances that might easily be broken by
snappers should not be used in their enclosures due to the risk of
electrocution. The author heats her snapper's tank with a combination of
warm room temperatures and a basking lamp. Do not leave a thermometer in
your snapper's tank!
Filtration: Buy the strongest filtration
system you can afford. A Duetto 100 submersible filter may work for a
hatchling in ten to twenty gallons of water but will not keep up with
wastes as your snapper grows. Reasonable persons may disagree as to what
constitutes effective filtering. The subject is a paper onto itself. You
must experiment with what works for you, knowing that the bottom line is
keeping the water clean. Large external canister filters provide strong
filtration, but the author's snapper continually dislodged and bit the
tubing. You may be more creative and find a way around this dilemma. The
author presently has great success using a Fluval 4 submersible filter,
hand-siphoning observable solid wastes with a turkey baster, feeding her
snapper in a separate tub, and one-week water changes. Effective
filtration will depend upon whether you choose to use a substrate or not,
the size of the turtle and its tank, the size of the filter, the filter
media, how you feed your turtle, and other factors
Lighting: If
your snapper does not have access to natural lighting in an outdoor (pond)
setup, you should provide a reasonable facsimile for the UVB component. Do
not place your tank in a window for several reasons. The water in your
tank may overheat and kill your snapper. The glass in the window and the
tank will filter out the beneficial UVB component of the sunlight. The
sunlight may cause algae to grow in your aquarium.
You can buy a
hood that holds UVB tube lights to place over your tank or you can make
one. If a hood you buy contains glass or plastic strips that protect the
tube lights, you will have to remove the strips which filter out the UVB
light. Other options include hanging a shoplight fixture with the tube
lights over your tank or setting one or more strip light fixtures with the
tube lights on a screen cover. The consensus recently seems to be that
Reptisun 5.0 tube lights made by Zoomed work well. They lose their
effectiveness over time and need to be replaced every 6 months to 1
year.
Ideally, try to expose your snapper to some summer sunshine
outside in a tub. Don't place the tub in direct sunshine, and do monitor
the water temperature. Overheating can kill! Watch your snapper. They are
excellent escape artists. You may wish to put a screen with a heavy rock
on top of the tub.
DIET
Snapping turtles are
omnivorous. In the wild, snappers will eat small mammals, birds, other
reptiles including smaller turtles, amphibians, fish, crayfish, crabs,
clams, snails, earthworms, leeches, insects, carrion, and many kinds of
plants like Elodea, Polygonum, Nuphar, Nymphaeca, and Typha (Ernst and
Barbour). In captivity, snappers will eat just about anything, but you
will want to give them a varied and healthy diet from the following
list:
Aquatic Turtle Foods - Buy the floating turtle pellets like
Reptomin and not fish foods.Turtle pellets make a good staple and should
be offered regularly.
Live Foods - Night crawlers, meal worms,
crayfish, crickets, and minnows are a few choices. You have to be careful,
though. Don't buy night crawlers grown in animal wastes or bait shop
minnows that have been raised in chemically-treated water. Don't get
worms, slugs, or insects from fertilized lawns or roadside ditches.
Goldfish may carry bacteria and snails may have parasites like flukes that
can kill your snapper.
"People" Meats - Never give your snapper
fatty or raw meats. Always cook chicken which can carry salmonella. Feed
only as an occasional treat.Plant Produce - This is a good way to get some
vitamins into your snapper. The author's snapper loves chunks of
microwaved sweet potato and butternut squash which are loaded with
carotenoids, collards with some calcium, and strawberries with Vitamin C.
Float some red-leafed lettuce in your snapper's tank and watch it
disappear. Wash all produce thoroughly before giving them to your
friend.
Supplements - You won't need to give your snapper vitamins
if you are providing a balanced diet, but offering pieces of cuttlebone as
a calcium supplement is recommended. Chip the soft front of the cuttlebone
into the tank and throw away the hard backing. Discard any uneaten pieces
with each water change or sooner if they start to smell.
Feed your
snapper in a separate tub to keep your tank clean longer. The water
temperature in the tub should be about the same as in the tank or just a
bit warmer. Turtles often defecate within an hour of being fed, so wait
awhile before returning the snapper to its tank. Feed hatchlings once or
twice a day. Small bits of earthworm have often been successful in
enticing them to eat. Wave the worm piece in front of them with a
toothpick. Larger snappers can be fed three times a week. If your snapper
appears to be bulging out of its shell, cut back on its food. If its skin
looks loose and baggy, feed it more. You will find an even keel through
trial and error.
Care
Tips
As hatchlings grow, some persons become alarmed
when their babies begin to look "furry." Do not apply medications to your
hatchlings or juvenile snappers! They do not have fungus or algae growing
on them. They grow initially by shedding many, many small bits of shell
and skin. A hatchling's shell feels extremely soft at first but gradually
hardens with a proper diet.
When the shell has hardened up, clean
you snapper's shell, top and bottom, once or twice a month with a very
soft toothbrush to help prevent any fungal growth. Place your snapper in a
small tub of lukewarm water and brush the top shell GENTLY. Make sure to
get into all the grooves and along the edges. Brushing the bottom shell
can be a bit tricky! While still a size that allows for grasping with one
hand, you may be able to hold the snapper upside down momentarily and get
in a few brush strokes. The author's snapper will usually freeze for at
least 30 seconds when held this way. Check for any light orange or
slightly off-color patches and gently brush over them. If beginning or
actual sores are present, check your aquarium for rough spots and keep
that water clean! Seek advice from a vet for more than the most
superficial sores or for any sore that won't heal.
Good Luck With
Your Snapper!
Please contact GalUpNorth@aol.com with any
questions.
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