I have been drawing the tortuga. Don't look too closely at their faces
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I have been drawing the tortuga. Don't look too closely at their faces

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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Today’s turtle is the Northern Diamondback Terrapin!
turtles from today
Favourite Turtle?
Burmese Roof Turtle
Carolina Diamondback Terrapin
Amboina Box Turtle
Common Snapping Turtle
Greek Tortoise
Northern Red-Bellied Cooter
Indochinese Box Turtle
Turtle of the Week!
Images under the cut!
Today’s turtle is the Carolina Diamondback Terrapin!

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
HAPPY TURTLE DAY EVERYONE!
Here is a little tribute to all things turtley, featuring a certain turtle-loving makanae :3
Anyway excuse me as I nerd out for abit:
The turtles (order Testudines) are a group of reptiles instantly recognisable thanks to their bowed legs, slow movements and, most striking of all, their shells. This unique structure, formed from the ribs and a few other bones, offers amazing protection against predators, even allowing the vulnerable head and neck to be retracted inside in the vast majority of species. Turtles proper evolved in the late Jurassic, and have since become extremely successful, found on every continent except Antarctica and coming in a wide variety of forms, including terrestrial herbivores, semi-aquatic omnivores, freshwater ambush-hunters and marine wanderers. However, the greater group that the turtles belong to, the Pantestudines, had their start in the Triassic (possibly even earlier, as a Permian reptile called Eunotosaurus is sometimes considered to be a turtle relative, but whether it actually is is unclear). Most of these animals would have looked very similar to modern turtles, differing only in a few minor anotomical traits, but the earliest forms would have more resembled lizards. Even so, these proto turtles already had the beginnings of a shell, in the form of their expanded ribs.
This was the perfect excuse to combine my two great passions: the natural world and cartoon characters.
Love among the cherry blossom … a pair of terrapins (red-eared sliders, to be precise) get to know each other in a pond in Iwakuni, Japan, engaging in a seasonal courtship display - Photograph: Artur Widak/NurPhoto/Shutterstock
Asa of June 1, Japan will ban the release of this invasive species, as well as crayfish. They can still be kept as pets. They are natives of the US
Click source for more Week in Wildlife photos
They are also partial to Shells!