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Why do turtles have shells?

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Answer: Protection from predators

Protection from predatorsCorrect! Defensive armor! Turtle shell (carapace + plastron): fused ribs and vertebrae covered by scutes (keratin plates). Functions: (1) Predator protection—hard barrier against bites, claws. (2) Retraction—head, legs pull inside. Modified skeleton—can't separate from shell (grows with turtle). Trade-offs: limits lung expansion (shell rigid), reduces speed. Box turtles: hinged plastron seals completely! Softshell turtles: leathery shell (different strategy). Shell evolved ~200 million years ago!

Storing water in shellWrong. Shell doesn't store water (myth). It's protective armor—fused skeleton providing defense from predators.

Amplifying hearing abilityWrong. Turtle shells don't amplify hearing—turtles have poor hearing and rely mainly on vibrations. Shells evolved purely as defensive armor against predators.

Go deeper: Carapace · Plastron · Scute
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