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  • 02-17-2008, 02:24 PM
    NotAnotherHonda
    Re: Red ear slider turtle. Need help.
    sliders lack saliva glands, so they will always need to be fed in water.
  • 02-18-2008, 10:02 AM
    littleindiangirl
    Re: Red ear slider turtle. Need help.
    You will have to get some turtle food that floats for him. I think 90 gallons is a little large, my best friend's family has kept them in 50 gallons for their whole life (25+years). They will give him feeder fish once in a while and he will eat a bunch and let some grow until he decides they are large enough for him to eat. But really, the larger the enclosure, the better, I just think 50 is ok as well. They shouldn't cost several hundred dollars to keep initially, and you can often find tanks that people are trying to get rid of on craigslist for cheap.
  • 02-18-2008, 03:03 PM
    Beardedragon
    Re: Red ear slider turtle. Need help.
    the rule of thumb for res is for every inch long you will need ten gallons. Alot of people abuse this and it is the same as people putting ball pythons under bright heat lamps under display. They can live in smaller tanks but that will not make a happy turtle and can stress them out.

    RES are not cheap to keep seeing that they need special lights and water requirments.I kept all mine in a huge backyard pond that i bought for them.Also, if it is wild, go put it back! Who knows what it is carrying and it is not good to take anything from the wild to keep. You can find a dealer to ship you a healthy res, they are very common in the pet trade.
  • 02-18-2008, 05:15 PM
    pythontricker
    Re: Red ear slider turtle. Need help.
    how much do water filters cost?
  • 02-18-2008, 07:15 PM
    Beardedragon
    Re: Red ear slider turtle. Need help.
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by pythontricker View Post
    how much do water filters cost?


    The cheaper they are the less they will work and the more your turtle tank will smell( badly). The best kind to get for turtles is a Canister filter, which run at around $120. Another type is a internal which are cheaper and do not work nearly as well.

    Id get a Rena FilStar xP3 Canister Filter, which filter 350 gph.

    For any tank you have you want the filter to be twice as powerful, so the rena is good up to a 175 gallon tank and keeps them spotless between weekly water changes.
  • 02-21-2008, 01:39 PM
    bigballs
    Re: Red ear slider turtle. Need help.
    trust me littleindiangirl, although smaller is possible, the bigger the better! and if you can get me a full and proper set up for a full grown RES for less than a couple hundred(even in the states) then send one over this way!
  • 02-21-2008, 02:45 PM
    Texas Dan
    Re: Red ear slider turtle. Need help.
    I had one of these for 2 years. It fed it grub worms and just kept him in a tub with mostly water and some land.
  • 02-28-2008, 02:53 PM
    Kesslers Kreatures
    Re: Red ear slider turtle. Need help.
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by pythontricker View Post
    how can i tell if its male or female?



    Look at its nails, if it has long nails it is a male, if it has short ones its a female. Do you have any pics?
  • 03-02-2008, 11:36 AM
    cpx_20o5
    Re: Red ear slider turtle. Need help.
    RES are wonderful turtles!
    they can eat pinkies (what you feed msot snakes).
    http://www.austinsturtlepage.com/Car...ear_slider.htm

    they get around 8 or so inches, but females can vary between 10 and 12 inches.
    Air Temperature: mid 70's - 80's
    Basking Temperature: High 80's to low 90's
    Water Temperature: ~ 72 to 76 degrees for sub-adults & adults, 78 to 80 degrees for hatchlings & smaller juveniles.
    they will need a much bigger gallon aquarium or surface mount pond.

    Mazuri and ReptoMin, Reptile/Pond 10, Cichlid Sticks, feeder fish, feeder crickets, earthworms, krill, blood worms, occasional crayfish & ghost shrimp, aquatic plants (such as Water Lilies, Water Hyacinth, Duckweed, Anacharis, Water Lettuce, Water Fern, Pondweed, Water starwort, Hornwort, Water oil, and Frogbit), some vegetables (such as Zucchini, Squash, Collard Greens, Beet Leaves, Endive, Romaine, Red Leaf Lettuce, Kale, Escarole, Mustard Greens & Dandelions) and some fruits (i.e. Banana). Many keepers use a good brand name commercial diet (usually Mazuri or ReptoMin Aquatic Turtle Diets) for a substantial portion (say, 25 - 80%) of the carnivorous portion of the diet, & round that out with treats of crickets, earth worms, crayfish, ghost shrimp & krill, & use Romaine lettuce (chosen over iceberg for higher fiber) & Anacharis as mainstays for the herbivorous portion of the diet. Since wild RES likely don't encounter fruits often we don't recommend use of Bananas & other fruits except as rare treats. Some people offer hairless mouse pups to turtles on occasion; never feed hairy animals to animals who don't naturally eat them (like RES) since hair is poorly digestible & can form trichobezoars (hairballs) & cause G.I. obstruction in some animals (so in theory perhaps RES).
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