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About Mark Adkins
Expertise
I will be glad to help with your tortoise- and turtle-related questions. My specialty is Red-foot and other Tortoises, but I can help with many aspects of turtle care. Understand- I am not a vet, and the more information you can give me, the more accurate my answer can be. (Because of the number of questions I get, I reserve the right to direct you to a good website that will help rather than re-inventing the wheel.)

Experience
Tortoise and other reptile keeper since 1964.
Member of the Nebraska Herpetological Society.
Author of books and articles on tortoise care.
Currently own five Red-foot Tortoises.
 
   

You are here:  Experts > Animals/Pets > Exotic Pets > Turtles > my turtle's shell went soft!

Topic: Turtles



Expert: Mark Adkins
Date: 7/13/2008
Subject: my turtle's shell went soft!

Question
Hello,   One of my poor floating turtles died!  Just before he died I noticed he had a soft shell.  Once he died, the underside of his belly "cracked" and his innards "disintegrated".  My other floating turtle is just beginning to get soft by his tail.  What can I do to keep him from dying too?  I got both these turtles at a shop down in Hilton Head, SC about a year ago.  They are no bigger than a square inch and aren't supposed to get any larger.  I keep them in a plastic container with slits in the top to allow air through.  Unfortunately, I fear they do not get enough light.  They live in a room-temperature climate and I feed them little pellets that the store gave me once a week.  They share the plastic container with only water and a large rock in the corner for them to rest on.  Please help!

Answer
I hate to say it, but the cares the poor turtles got were absolutely not good for them.

For example...
- Turtles are not supposed to float. Floating is usually a sign of pneumonia.
- There is NO turtle that stays smaller than 4" long as an adult, and most common pet turtles are 6-12" long as adults.
- Turtles need lots of space. The smallest recommended habitat is 10 gallons of water per inch of shell length.
- They need daily feedings that combine good pellets and live or frozen/thawed food.
- They need good light, warmth, and water filtration

If the turtle is floating and soft, you can save its life, but it is going to mean a lot of changes. You should read up on its care- I would recommend starting at http://www.redearslider.com

Turtles want three things...
- Good water. Figure 10 gallons of actual water per inch of shell length, warmed to about 75-80F for most species, and kept sparkling clean with a big filter (figure 2-3 times the size of the aquarium)

- Good sun. They need a safe, easy to access basking site. Rocks and dirt are not good, wood and plastic is OK. The basking site should be well-lit and heated to about 90F. The entire tank should be well-lit for about 12-14 hours a day- but allow a lot of shade.

- Good food. Go with about 1/2 pellets, and 1/2 live or frozen/thawed 'fish foods' like small fish, snails, shrimp, krill, worms, insects, coked chicken, beef heart, etc. A daily portion would be about the size of the turtle's head.



In addition to all of this, you are going to need to treat the illnesses the turtle has picked up. Use the fish medicine Stress Coat in the water per directions and boost water temps about 5 degrees to help with the pneumonia and other infections.

Get some turtle Cuttle Bone and see if the turtle will eat it to help it get some more calcium. Otherwise, a good diet should help with this. Natural sunlight, that does not pass through glass or plastic, will help as well. You can try a UVB light bulb if sunlight is not available or it is not eating.




I know this is a lot. The sad reality is that turtles are not simple, cheap pets even though they are often sold that way. Please understand, I get LOTS of letters from people in your situation- a turtle that is not doing well because of bad or old advice they are following.

Good luck!


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