Adult Female
Name: unnamed
Species: Opal Turtle
Birthday: Wednesday, September 14, 2016
Owner: Rosehill
Element: Neutral
Although the sea is full of many beautiful creatures, few things are as breathtakingly beautiful as an opal turtle swimming through a reef. Unlike land turtles, opal turtles and other marine species are built for speed, sometimes reaching up to thirty knots. They have well-formed flippers in place of webbed feet, the front providing propulsion while the rear flippers steer the turtle. Their shells are protective, but less so than in river and land species, for the opal turtle cannot pull its head or flippers in for protection. They have a specialized beak that changes in shape throughout their lives to accommodate a changing diet. While young opal turtles are primarily carnivorous, adults feed on a mix of plant and animal matter, grazing large fields of Candle Archipelagos sea grass. However no turtle, no matter their size, will ever pass up the chance at a tasty jellyfish.
On a good day or night, a lucky visitor to the Candle Archipelagos might spot a shimmer of color breach the surface of the water then disappear. Paddle out to one of the region's lagoons in a small boat and you might get a closer look at one of the islands' seasonal visitors, the opal turtle. So-named for the beautiful iridescent patterns inlaid within their keratinous shells, unlike real opal, the color in these turtles' shells comes from the glowing jellyfish they love to eat. This gives the patterns in the shell a faint luminescence, which can be seen against the dark of the rest of the shell when the turtles come up for air. Once hunted for their beautiful shells, opal turtles are now protected in the Candle Archipelagos and migrate in vast numbers every summer to mate and lay their eggs on the beach.
Sprite art: Jrap17 (adult) | Description: PKGriffin