The hawk-billed tortoise
The hawk-billed tortoise, also known as the parrot tortoise, is a relatively small tortoise among all tortoise species. It is similar to the pancake tortoise. It is also a species that lives in rock crevices. The only difference among the tortoise species is that the eagle-billed tortoise will hide in stone cracks when encountering danger and will not attack automatically.
Chinese name:Owl-billed tortoise
Other name :Parrot-billed Cape tortoise, Hook-billed Cape tortoise
Latin name:beaked Cape tortoise
< p style="text-indent:28px">Two Laws:Homopus areolatusWorld:Animals Kingdom
Phylum:Chordata
Class: Reptilida
Order: Turtles
Suborder:Suborder Turtles
Family:Ratutes
Genus:Ratite
Species:Hyperbill tortoise
Dispersed area:South Africa In the south, the southern part of Kaipu Tianya Province.
Growth method: Oviparous, female turtles lay eggs once a year, one egg at a time, about 115 seconds between 28-30℃ It hatches within days, which takes much longer than other common turtle species.
Body size: 8cm~12cm.
Living habits: The most important thing is to be active in the warm morning. They will focus on the sun to keep warm. When the morning is warmed, the parrots will open their mouths. The tortoise will become active and actively explore all areas and eat.
Food habits:Food includes grass-fed, mosaic, cucumber, pumpkin, grape and fig, occasionally supplemented by oats, wheat, corn and calcium Quality D3 etc.
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