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  2. What do turtles eat? Whether in the wild or your home, here's ...

    www.aol.com/turtles-eat-whether-wild-home...

    In the United States, around 2.3 million households are home to reptiles, including turtles. Here's what the reptile can and cannot eat.

  3. What animals eat cicadas? - AOL

    www.aol.com/animals-eat-cicadas-085337093.html

    Mammals and birds, amphibians and reptiles, and fish all eat cicadas — and benefit from the glut of them. What do cicadas eat?: Trillions of cicadas to emerge in the United States.

  4. African spurred tortoise - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/African_spurred_tortoise

    In the wild, they have been observed to also eat plants and algae off the surface of the water. [6] African spurred tortoises are also capable of eating various vegetables such as endive, dandelion greens, and dark leafy greens. Despite being herbivores, they will occasionally eat the carcasses of dead animals.

  5. Cicadas have re-emerged in Wisconsin for the first time in 17 ...

    www.aol.com/cicadas-emerged-wisconsin-first-time...

    What Wisconsin animals eat cicadas? In Wisconsin, a wide range of birds, fish, turtles, snakes and mammals eat cicadas. Cicada predators include foxes, skunks, squirrels, raccoons and possums.

  6. Neotibicen - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neotibicen

    Many animals feed on cicadas, which usually occurs during the final days when they become easy prey near the ground. One of the more notable predators is the cicada killer, a large wasp that catches the dog-day cicada. After catching and stinging the insect to paralyze it, the cicada killer carries it back to its hole and drags it underground ...

  7. Three-toed box turtle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Three-toed_box_turtle

    The three-toed box turtle (Terrapene triunguis) is a species within the genus of hinge-shelled turtles commonly referred to as box turtles. This species is native to the south-central part of the United States and is the official reptile of the state of Missouri . [ 4 ]

  8. An Animated Guide to the Rare 2024 Cicada Co-Emergence - AOL

    www.aol.com/animated-guide-rare-2024-cicada...

    Cicadas that are part of both a 13-year and a 17-year brood will emerge at the same time this spring. ... raccoons, turtles, and even some humans—love to eat cicadas, which are in the same ...

  9. Neotibicen dealbatus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neotibicen_dealbatus

    Megatibicen dealbatus, commonly called the plains cicada, is a species of annual cicada. [1] Dealbatus is Latin for "whitewashed".. This species used to be called Tibicen dealbatus, but in July 2015, after genetic and physiological evaluation and reconfiguration of the genus Tibicen, this cicada and others in the genus Tibicen were moved to newly created genera.