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Arakan Turtle

Arakan-Forest-Turtle

The semi-terrestrial Arakan turtle, commonly referred to as the Arakan forest turtle, is a native of Bangladesh and Myanmar. At the turn of the 20th century, the species was regarded as nearly extinct, but that perception was altered in 1994 when a specimen was discovered in a market in Myanmar.

Arakan forest turtles spend the most of their time sleeping, and they eat a wide variety of things, including fruit, insects, crabs, worms, mushrooms, and even fish.

Habitat 

The geographic range of the Arakan forest turtle is quite distinct. They only exist naturally in a limited area of shared bamboo forest between Bangladesh and Myanmar on the Arakan Mountains (hence the name).

Care as a Pet

Animal trade traders in China are the most popular owners of arakan forest turtles as pets. It is not advised to keep an Arakan forest turtle in the United States due to their protection status. This is mostly because little research has been done on their needs, making it unlikely that keeping one as a pet will help the species survive.

They are great hiders, which is largely why their temperament is unknown. Because humans are their greatest threat, this is what makes Arakan forest turtles bad pets because they aren’t likely to get along with people.

Arakan-Forest Turtle

Feed

In a nutshell, almost everything. The diet of the species includes a variety of microscopic animals, including worms, fish, and bugs, as we have previously said.

Additionally, they like to eat things that are easier to capture, like fruit that falls from trees or animal waste. Yes, it’s disgusting. Arakan forest turtles hunt when they are ready. Contrary to the widespread idea that turtles are passive creatures (remember The Rabbit and the Turtle?). These so-called “rhino dung eaters” are actually ferocious hunters.

Table

Arakan Turtle table

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