Turtle

A turtle is a common passive mob that moves both on land and in water.

Spawning
Turtles spawn on the sand in the Overworld on beaches with daylight, but not in its snowy variant or stone shores, occasionally in small groups of up to 5 individuals.

10% of turtles spawned are babies.

$$, turtles spawn at light levels greater than 8 and below 4 blocks above sea level (typically 62), on the sand.

$$, turtles spawn in groups of 2–6, at light level 7 or higher, at Y 60–67.

Drops
When turtles die, they drop:
 * 0–2 . The maximum amount is increased by 1 per level of Looting, for a maximum of 0–5 with Looting III.
 * , if killed by a player or tamed wolf.
 * 1, if killed by lightning.

When a baby turtle grows up to an adult it drops:
 * 1

Upon successful breeding, is dropped.

Behavior
Turtles can both move around on land and swim in water. They move slowly on land, but they can swim at a fast speed in the water. Like other passive mobs, they move around aimlessly and flee when attacked. When on land, they generally attempt to move to the nearest water source with direct sky access. When in an enclosed area, such as a player-made enclosure, they generally swim in circles if the water is in the area, and rarely go on land to explore, if there is any.

Turtles cannot be attached to leads, but they can be led by a player holding seagrass within 10 blocks of the turtle.

Turtles can be picked up by boats and minecarts.

Predators
Turtles are attacked by the following mobs: (Includes mobs that also break turtle eggs.)

Zombies and their variants deliberately trample on turtle eggs, causing them to break.

Home beach
Each turtle remembers the block on which it hatched as its home beach. No matter how far away the turtle travels, it always eventually returns to its home beach to lay its eggs after breeding.

If the player uses a tool enchanted with Silk Touch to obtain and move turtle eggs to a new location before hatching, the baby turtles remember the new hatching location as their home beach.

If a turtle is spawned from a spawn egg, summoned with the command, or spawned by mob spawners, it remembers the spawn location as its home beach.

Breeding
Feeding two turtles seagrass causes them to enter love mode, causing one of the turtles to have eggs in its inventory and appear a bit bigger (about .2 of a block) than normal turtles. The pregnant turtle then travels back to its home beach, which is where it first spawned. Upon arrival, it seeks a nearby sand block on which to lay its eggs. The turtle digs vigorously for several seconds a few times - with pauses, on top of the sand, and then lays 1–4 turtle eggs. The pregnant turtle can breed again immediately after laying the eggs while the other turtle can mate immediately after mating. On Bedrock Edition turtles have a 90-second cooldown between breeding.

Eggs
Eggs can be placed on any block in clusters of up to 4, although they must be placed on sand or red sand to hatch. Using an egg on a horizontal surface places a single egg, and using an egg on an existing egg cluster of size <4 adds that egg to the cluster. Eggs can be destroyed by jumping on them, hitting them, walking over them, or dropping items on them. They are destroyed one at a time (decreasing the cluster size). A turtle can walk on the eggs without breaking them. Harvesting eggs with Silk Touch drops an egg, which can land on the remaining eggs, breaking one of them.

Turtle eggs go through 3 stages before hatching into baby turtles, each stage having a random duration according to received random ticks. Turtle eggs hatch only on sand and red sand, during both day and night, although the eggs advance 500 times faster during the night than during the day.

Babies
With a height of 0.12 blocks, baby turtles are the smallest mobs in the game. Baby turtles are small enough that when they walk on soul sand, they are entirely within the space at the top of the block and therefore suffocate in it, much like endermites and silverfish.

The growth of baby turtles can be accelerated using seagrass. Each use reduces the growth duration by 10%, as well as slowly increasing their size by about .01 of a block. Upon becoming an adult, the turtle drops a scute.

ID




Entity data
Turtles have entity data associated with them that contains various properties.