Janus, the Geneva Museum of Natural History's two-headed Greek tortoise is presented to the press and the public during the official celebration of its 10th birthday on September 5, 2007, at the Natural History Museum in Geneva. A two-headed tortoise is also going on display in Kiev.
Photograph by: Fabrice Coffrini , AFP/Getty Images
Photograph by: Fabrice Coffrini , AFP/Getty Images
KIEV - A two-headed Central Asian tortoise has gone on show at the
natural science museum in Kiev where visitors will be able to observe
the different eating habits of each head over the next two months."Strictly
speaking it isn't a tortoise with two heads, but rather two conjoined
tortoises," Yuri Yuravliov, a zoologist, told AFP.
"The female has two heads, two hearts, four front legs, but only two hind ones, and one intestine," he explained.
The five-year-old tortoise has a heart-shaped shell, about a dozen centimetres (4.7 inches) in width, according to an AFP journalist.
The two heads are quite different, even in their feeding habits.
The left one is more dominant and active, "prefers green food, while the other prefers more brightly-coloured food - carrots and dandelion flowers," said Yuravliov.
The tortoise, a species that can live 50 to 60 years, was kept from birth by a Ukrainian in his home, he said.
"Animals with this type of pathology are only rarely born and don't survive in natural condition."
"The female has two heads, two hearts, four front legs, but only two hind ones, and one intestine," he explained.
The five-year-old tortoise has a heart-shaped shell, about a dozen centimetres (4.7 inches) in width, according to an AFP journalist.
The two heads are quite different, even in their feeding habits.
The left one is more dominant and active, "prefers green food, while the other prefers more brightly-coloured food - carrots and dandelion flowers," said Yuravliov.
The tortoise, a species that can live 50 to 60 years, was kept from birth by a Ukrainian in his home, he said.
"Animals with this type of pathology are only rarely born and don't survive in natural condition."
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