Anyone with experience of caecilians?
Posted: 20 Oct 2006, 19:05
I've managed to get my grubby mitts on a pair of Typhlonectes natans, they're in the shop awaiting pick-up. I've read just about every snippet of info I can find, unfortunately the majority is very generalised so fairly unhelpful beyond "they're amphibians". Concerning specifically Typhlonectes natans I know these chaps are aquatic, need soft water, eat earthworms and other such gribblies, are fantastic escape artists that can breathe air, have a large temperature tolerance but do best from 24 - 28 degrees and are livebearers with a gestation of 11 months. Beyond that I'm kind of in the dark. I was planning on putting them in with my soft-water river community tank, as it's got a fairly low population at the moment, just a pair of small hoplos, a syno. eupterus and a pair of geophagus brasiliensis in there at the moment, the cats have never shown interest in anything alive (there was a newt in with them for about a year) so my only concern would be the geophagus, who can be transferred to a breeder tank if needs be, OR the caecilians could go in there on their own, but it's a bit small for them and can't be sealed completely, the other tank can. Having played the game of "hunt the newt" more times than I care to think about when I first got her, I don't really want a repeat performance. So anyone kept these critters, any advice or warnings? I look forward to any help anyone can offer, thanks in advance.
Tanis
Tanis