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My new Red Eared Slider, Flash, is peeling, is this normal?

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Flash is peeling or shedding or something. He always has some kind of white-ish filmy stuff on his legs and neck. His tank and water is clean. Is it p**p?

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  1. He's probably shedding. Don't worry about it it's NORMAL. It should come off in three days to a week. All reptiles shed, that's how they grow.


  2. Shedding how much?  They don't shed their entire body at once if it is looking like cotton you have some issues. .

    Fungal infections” are fairly common among red-eared sliders, especially younger ones. If you notice what looks like a light layer of cotton on your slider’s shell or eyes or in its mouth, this is most likely some form of fungal infection. Although their appearance can be alarming, most infections in their early stages are fully treatable at home. If a fungal infection remains untreated, however, it can spread across the entire body and cause serious harm to your turtle.

    To treat a mild fungal infection, immerse your red-eared slider in a warm saltwater bath for about half an hour each day, using a soft sponge to gently scrub the infected regions. You can also treat patches of fungus with topical applications of a mild antiseptic, such as povidone-iodine. As long as the problem isn’t severe, you should notice signs of recovery within a day or two, and a full recovery in about 10–14 days.

    If your turtle has a persistent fungal infection that home treatment isn’t curing, take it to the vet for treatment. Several medications are available that can address a fungal infection if it hasn’t spread too far.”

    The bigger the environment the bigger the healthier the turtle. Remember 10 gallons for every inch of turtle. I have used kiddy pools and plastic pond liners from most nurseries and worked great.

    Did you know that they need to bask under a reptile light UVA/UVB for 8 to 10 hrs a day for the vitamin D that they need to grow. So that means getting a turtle dock also.

    Leave the heater on 75 to 78 degrees always. These turtles in captivity do not hibernate their eating may slow down some but they will not hibernate.

    Their water needs to be clean otherwise they get sick easily from dirty water cause they p**p allot.

    Total Body length: 5-8" average, up to 12 inches max. Life span: 15-25+ years

    Males have the longer front nails and are used in mating. And are considered mature at about 5 yrs old. You can’t start sexing till about  3” across.

    You need a good filter system! Gravel larger than they can swallow.

    You need to feed them feeder guppies, goldfish or minnows for protein and calcium daily drop 20 or so in the tanks and watch them disappear in a few days! When I got these two 36 yrs ago all we had in back then  were goldfish to feed , so after 36 yrs and still going strong. They can eat goldfish! I spend about 175.00 a month on fish ,goldfish and minnows. An Extra  75.00 on leafy greens and dried cubed tubiflex worms.

    This way when they swim for their dinner they get exercise also!

    They sleep at the bottom of rivers, streams. lakes or ponds or your tank to avoid predators like coyotes,  foxes, owls, hawks, possums, raccoons and even some wide mouth bass.

    TOSS in a bird cuttle bone in the water for calcium. it will dissolve real slow and if they eat it that’s fine!!

    They can have garden worms, meal worms, snails, crickets, flies, crayfish small frogs, dragon flies and  anything that moves only as a treat.

    They need leafy greens Romaine, Butter lettuce. (Iceberg and cabbage are bad for them, any other leafy greens will do) for vitamin A that they need at least 3 to 4 times a week.

    You probably already know that they get sick easily, shell rot, respiratory sickness, lopsided swimming, coughing, blowing bubbles from their nose.

    **Swollen cloudy eyes means lacking in Vitamin A. Which we all need for good eyes. Google ‘vegetables with Vitamin A.

    Contact the “www.anapsid.org/societies, for a turtle vet /  rescue in your city and state.

    I wish you luck.

    http://www.flickr.com/photos/29035692@N0...


  3. White-ish film could be early stages of a fungal infection.  Check this site to see if this is what is going on:

    http://www.geocities.com/margareth100.ge...

    If it's fungal, you'll need to strip and clean his habitat and every thing in it, especially the filter.

    Make sure his water and basking temperatures are correct:

    http://www.redearslider.com/index_habita...

    Good luck, and I hope this has been helpful.

  4. he could be shedding unless its liquid then its pee (YES PEEING IS NORMAL!) p**p is brown

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