Cane Forest Turtle The focus of raising the sugarcane forest turtle
The sugarcane forest turtle

The sugarcane forest turtle is an omnivorous turtle, but in In the wilderness, sugarcane forest turtles often only eat some plant foods. Sugarcane forest turtles that are suitable for human breeding also eat meat. In order to protect nutrients as much as possible, try to use a wider variety of food.

The sugarcane forest turtle has a wide range of food habits, including rice, wheat, peas, small fish, shrimp, insects, snails, etc. When raising artificially, in order to meet the various nutrients required for the growth of cane forest turtles and avoid stunted growth and anorexia due to simple feed, a variety of feeds should be used, such as fish, shrimp, snails, rivers and fish in animal feeding. Mussels, etc. and rice, wheat, corn, etc. in plant-based feeds.

Cane forest turtles are often herbivorous under natural conditions, and even in captivity they occasionally eat meat. It is best to feed them a mixed vegetable consisting of fruits (especially tomatoes), vegetables and kale leaves two to three times a week. Adult turtles can be fed skinned and chopped mice or flesh-colored baby mice once every two weeks, but do not feed meat to juvenile turtles and hatchlings. Most hatchlings and hatchlings prefer tomatoes to all other foods, and tomatoes are the perfect choice to allow those picky turtles to eat in an orderly manner. If you feed mixed vegetables, it is usually not necessary to supplement vitamins. For hatchlings and hatchlings, calcium and phosphate supplements are needed, and a good diet should include TurtleBrittlea to provide vitamin D3.


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