red eared and yellow bellied slider turtles swimming

navigate by keyword : red eared yellow bellied slider turtles swimming 1the trachemys scripta elegans closely pond one popular mid 1980 comic directed teenagers teenaged mutant ninja group superheroes shells fat stubby limbs look like good swimmers aerodynamic shell strong legs fact excellent hold breath hour longer generally resurface five minutes air stow lake golden gate park april

Red eared and Yellow bellied slider turtles swimming, 1. Royalty Free Stock Photo
Red eared and Yellow bellied slider turtles swimming 55 Royalty Free Stock Photo
Red eared and Yellow bellied slider turtles swimming 54 Royalty Free Stock Photo
Red eared and Yellow bellied slider turtles swimming 8 Royalty Free Stock Photo
Red eared and Yellow bellied slider turtles swimming 7 Royalty Free Stock Photo
Red eared and Yellow bellied slider turtles swimming 34 Royalty Free Stock Photo
Red eared and Yellow bellied slider turtles swimming 26 Royalty Free Stock Photo
Red eared and Yellow bellied slider turtles swimming 3
Red eared and Yellow bellied slider turtles swimming 3 Royalty Free Stock Photo
Red eared and Yellow bellied slider turtles swimming 6 Royalty Free Stock Photo
Red eared and Yellow bellied slider turtles swimming 33 Royalty Free Stock Photo
Red eared and Yellow bellied slider turtles swimming 52 Royalty Free Stock Photo
Red eared and Yellow bellied slider turtles swimming 5 Royalty Free Stock Photo
Red eared and Yellow bellied slider turtles swimming 9 Royalty Free Stock Photo
Red eared and Yellow bellied slider turtles swimming 4 Royalty Free Stock Photo
The Red eared slider, Trachemys scripta elegans and Yellow bellied slider, Trachemys scripta scripta turtles are closely related pond slider turtles. The Red eared slider became one of the most popular turtles in the mid 1980`s due in part to a comic directed to then teenagers, the popular Teenaged Mutant Ninja Turtles, which was about a group of Red eared slider turtles superheroes. Because of their shells and fat, stubby limbs, they look like they should not be very good swimmers, but it is because of the aerodynamic of the very shell, along with strong legs, that they in fact are very excellent swimmers. Although they can hold their breath for a half hour, or even longer, they generally resurface about every five minutes for air. As seen at Stow Lake in Golden Gate Park 13 April 2022.


Stockphotos.ro (c) 2025. All stock photos are provided by Dreamstime and are copyrighted by their respective owners.