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Snapping Turtle

Body: 

colour photo of a snapping turtle at the bottom of a pand

Snapping Turtle

Kingdom: Animalia

Phylum: Chordata

Class: Testudines

Family: Chelydridae

Genus: Chelydra

Species: Chelydra serpentina

Snapping Turtles have an embarrassing secret: while most turtles can pull into their shell for protection, Snapping Turtles can’t! The bottom part of their shell, called the plastron, is too small to fit their head, legs, and tail safely inside. That’s why they can be grumpy on land - it’s only to protect themselves! On land, they’re too slow to run away from danger and will snap their jaws to keep any predators away. In the water, they simply swim away and are of no safety concern for people. Not only that, but they are important aquatic scavengers and work to keep our water systems clean. 

 

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Guelph, ON N1G 2W1
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The land where The Arboretum now grows has been home to plants and animals for thousands of years. It was home to Indigenous peoples long before settlers arrived. We recognize the traditional, ancestral, and treaty lands of the Anishinaabeg, Haudenosaunee, Attawandaron, and Mississaugas of the Credit peoples, as well as the Dish with One Spoon covenant covering the Between the Lakes Treaty 3 lands on which the University of Guelph and The Arboretum now sit. We are honoured to work on and care for this land.


Source URL:https://arboretum.uoguelph.ca/snapping-turtle