The Virginian-Pilot
                             THE VIRGINIAN-PILOT 
              Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc.

DATE: Tuesday, November 28, 1995             TAG: 9511280349
SECTION: LOCAL                    PAGE: B4   EDITION: FINAL 
SOURCE: ASSOCIATED PRESS 
DATELINE: HAMPTON                            LENGTH: Medium:   53 lines

THINK TWICE: TURTLE WITH 2 HEADS GIVES MIXED SIGNALS

When a turtle has two heads, is it a ``he'' or a ``she?''

``It's probably a little bit of both,'' said John Keinath, a professor at Thomas Nelson Community College where the two-headed creature lives. ``We've been trying to decide for years whether it's an `it' or a `them.' ''

The animal is almost a garden-variety snapping turtle. It has one shell, a tail and four legs. What's different are the two fully formed heads.

Keinath named it ``This and That.''

The turtle was found a little more than five years ago on Gwynn's Island not long after it had hatched. The finder contacted Keinath, then coordinator of a sea turtle program at the Virginia Institute of Marine Science.

The finder probably saved the turtle from death. Keinath said it was headed toward the Chesapeake Bay, an inhospitable body of salty water for a fresh-water creature.

The turtle sometimes gives its body conflicting signals. Each head seems to control the front leg on its side of the body, but both heads have some imput into both rear legs.

``It's pretty uncoordinated,'' Keinath said.

Alan Savitzky, a biological sciences professor at Old Dominion University, said two-headed reptiles aren't that unusual. They survive such conditions because they don't have complicated metabolisms like mammals.

``If you only need to eat every once in a while, you can survive long enough to be found,'' Savitzky said.

He guessed the reason for the two heads was environmental rather than genetic.

Exactly how much of This and That is one turtle on the inside and how much is dual won't be known until the creature lives out its life. There's only so much that can be determined from observation, said biology student Deborah Root-Stuparich.

``I don't want to see him die,'' she said. ``But if he did, it certainly would be interesting to dissect him and see what's in there.'' ILLUSTRATION: ASSOCIATED PRESS photo

John Keinath, a professor at Thomas Nelson Community College, where

the two-headed turtle lives, has named it ``This and That.'' The

animal is almost a garden-variety snapping turtle. It has one shell,

a tail and four legs - and two fully formed heads. It was found

about five years ago on Gwynn's Island not long after it had

hatched.

by CNB