Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Tropical Zones

Sunday, August 29th, 2010

Approximately 1 inch (2.5 cm) of the pit should be submerged. It is time to pot the pit when many roots are present. The avocado and pineapple plants require full sunlight and are suitable plants to include in a tropical terrarium.

The aforementioned plants represent only a sample of the live plants that might be successfully maintained in a tropical habitat. The possibility of failure or success in an attempt to establish a well-balanced environment for lizards and live plants is probably determined by many factors. The individual who has the aid of a “green thumb” will most likely be a step ahead of the game.

Certain species of plants are poisonous and should not be included in a terrarium that houses lizards. Senecio macroglossus, an ivy-like tropical plant, is a poisonous species. Likewise, Philodendron is a toxic plant. Certain plants require specific care. The tropical zebra arrowroot, Calathea, although suitable for the terrarium throughout most of the year, tends to prefer a slightly cooler temperature during the winter. Recommendations concerning plant fertilizers and pesticides, as well as a suitable day/night schedule and the provision of a shaded area within the tropical terrarium, parallel the suggestions given for temperate/subtropical habitats.

From a romantic point of view, a rain-forest habitat simulated within the confines of a terrarium seems to be the most beneficial environment that can be provided for tropical lizards. This type of environment also offers the most appealing approach to the keeper. In practice, however, the scenic beauty of even the best-designed terrarium maintained by the average amateur herpetologist might be demolished by the ever-increasing size and activity of the rapidly growing larger species of lizards. A walk-in greenhouse or similar structure is then necessary if the lizard is to be provided with a jungle-like environment.

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Laemanctus Longipes

Wednesday, August 25th, 2010

The conehead (Laemanctus Longipes) is an omnivore, consuming mass quantities of different types of food. Plants require approximately the same temperature and relative humidity factors as the tropical lizards that might share the environment. Two plants that require full sun are Coleus (flame nettle) and Musa (banana). Banana plants are attractive and appropriate when small, but if properly cared for these plants might outgrow the habitat.

Plants that are suitable for use in tropical lizard environments usually are cultivated for their lush foliage. Genera that require abundant indirect sunlight include Alloplectus, Alocasia, Caladium (angel’s wings), Calathea, Ctenanthe, Maranta (prayer plant), and Pellonia.

The pineapple plant (Ananas) can be grown from the fruit. The top section of the fruit, which contains the leaves, should be removed and potted after the bit of fruit remaining at the bottom of the cutting has dried for several days. The avocado (Persea) can be germinated in water. To do this, insert several toothpicks into the pit, place the pit in a glass or jar, and add water. The toothpicks are used to suspend the pit from the top of the container.

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Growing Troubles with Man 2

Sunday, August 22nd, 2010

The lot of reptiles, living on earth with man these latter years, is mainly decimation. By an odd eddy in the current of progress, however, some things we do turn out to further the reptile cause. For instance, land reptiles eat  whole small animals, and man does a number of things that favor the increase of these. Predator control is one such thing. Quail management in south Georgia has killed off old enemies of rabbits, and the diamondback rattlesnake has now become more plentiful there than anywhere else. Cutover lands generally make better snake and lizard country than original forest, and the borders between woods and fields are also highly productive of reptiles. The gravitation of some kinds of snakes and lizards into and around human abodes was spoken of in another chapter, as was the inadvertent extension of reptile ranges by transportation in the cargoes of commerce.

Besides these more-or-less accidental aids to reptiles, man has erected a few preserves to save threatened species. The islands set aside for the tuatara in New Zealand are the most notable example. The desert tortoise is protected in California, the diamondback terrapin on part of the Atlantic Coast and the Gila monster and horned lizard in Arizona. For a time there was a python preserve.

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Growing Troubles with Man

Wednesday, August 18th, 2010

Turtles, anole chameleons and baby alligators were almost the only reptiles to be found for sale in American pet stores. Today, in many cities you can choose from a varied line of lizards, snakes and turtles in the pet shops, and this commerce has suddenly become one of the principal ways in which man is exploiting reptiles to his material gain. By far the most popular reptilian pets are baby turtles, which are hatched for the trade by millions in Mississippi Valley hatcheries. The sale of baby alligators is now prohibited, but importation of tropical caimans is filling the gap. Snakes and lizards, because they are partial to live food, are a little less easy to keep than turtles, but for a determined culturist this is no real problem. People are keeping snakes and lizards all about the land, and are no doubt better people for it.

It is perhaps idle but nonetheless engaging to speculate about the origins of the odd spiritual ties between reptiles and man. The new vogue for reptile pets, like the little boys’ old interest in them, is part bravado – a swelling pride in shedding a fear. Therefore, the origin of the conquered fear is the thing that seems worth psychological attention. Some of it is traditional, learned or affected. Part of it, however, may be innate. For a long time it has been the habit of sages to deride the popular belief that the dread of snakes is instinctive. They point out that a baby does not recoil at a proffered snake; he accepts and chews on it joyously. But this means nothing. The same baby will not whistle when a pretty girl passes. The anthropoid animal has had long evolutionary communion with serpents. There is growing evidence that a main center of human evolution was in a part of Africa where cobras, mambas and pythons are common today and have likely been for a long time. It is unthinkable that with such a background we should have failed to acquire any inherent snake-avoidance adaptations. It is even less likely that we should have wholly lost them.

That is to say, I am pretty sure a little of the fear of snakes is instinctive. The greater part of it no doubt comes from the harrowing way Grandma took on over the whiteoak snake in the privy – from being marked by hearing the tale in the third and fourth generation. But to say without proof that any ape has got over all its hereditary readiness for the snake crisis makes little sense. Your dog goes around and around before lying down in the long-dead grass of your living-room rug – and your mind goes around at the sudden sight of a snake.

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The Miraculous Shelled Egg 2

Friday, August 13th, 2010

All the live-bearing reptiles of modern times are lizards and snakes. Turtles and crocodilians produce only eggs, and so does the tuatara. It is significant that of the three reptiles which venture farthest north, even across the Arctic Circle, two – the European viper and the lizard Lacerta vivipara – bear their young alive. So does the slowworm (Anguis), another venturer into northern regions. The cold ground of those areas, no doubt, is not well suited to incubating eggs. Neither is water, so far as shelled eggs are concerned, which explains why most  reptiles with strongly aquatic habits also bear their young alive.

Many of the live-bearing reptiles, however, belong to groups that have egg-laying members too. The skinks, the lacertas, the boids and the vipers are examples. There are even species that lay eggs in some parts of their ranges but bear live young in other parts. This suggests that their viviparity – as the ability to produce live young is called – is not so formal an undertaking as it is in mammals, and this is true. Some reptiles merely keep the eggs inside the body, for varying periods up to and after hatching time. In others there are extensive, placentalike connections with the tissues of the maternal oviduct. In one type the yolk sac is merely plastered against the wall of the oviduct, and is used primarily for respiration. In a more advanced type the embryonic membranes,the chorion and allantois, interfold with maternal tissues and the embryo not only gets water and nourishment as well as oxygen, but conveniently has its excretory wastes taken away too. None of the live-bearing reptiles has dispensed with a big store of yolk as the main source nourishment for the growing embryo.

All reptiles practice internal fertilization. In all modern forms except the tuatara the male has an organ kept turned outside in, in the base of the tail, and everted through the opening of the cloaca during erection. In the tuatara the transfer of sperm is accomplished by bringing the genital openings into contact, as in birds. This was probably the method used by the ancestral reptiles – it is clear, in any case, that the penis had separate origin in turtles, crocodilians and mammals on the one hand, and in lizards and snakes on the other.

Thus, male lizards and snakes have not just one, but a pair of hollow structures called hemipenes, which make up their copulatory organs. located as they are in the tail just behind the opening of the cloaca, the hemipenes often give the tail of the male a thicker, more gradually tapering contour than that of the female, and in many species the sexes can be distinguished by this difference. A groove that serves as a channel for the sperm extends from the opening of the sperm ducts along the inner wall (which is the outer wall during erection) of each hemipenis, and the surface may be pleated or set with spines that keep it in place in the oviduct of the female during mating. Either one of the hemipenis may be used, but only one, the one nearest to the female, is everted and protruded from the cloaca during erection, which is brought about by a combination of muscular action and distension of the walls with blood.

Among different reptiles fertilization is scheduled differently with respect to the time of nesting. In most species it seems to occur, as might be expected, just before the eggs are laid; but in some the sperm may live on in the reproductive tract of the female and continue to fertilize eggs months or even years after copulation has taken place. The longest known periods of such deferment of fertilization are four years for the diamond back terrapin of the southern United States, and five years in the case of the tropical American cat-eye snake. The green turtle, which evidently mates only in the sea off the nesting beach, often does so after the female has gone ashore and laid her eggs. Since a given female makes her migration to the nesting ground only once in three, or more turtles.

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The Miraculous Shelled Egg

Monday, August 9th, 2010

Reptiles are sexual animals and are the group that introduced internal fertilization to the vertebrate line. Thus, in a manner of speaking, they laid the foundation for the family unit in higher vertebrates, and from this came human society itself, with all its excitement and troubles. The ancestral amphibians deposited their eggs virtually naked in the water, and fertilized them by simply releasing sperm in the general vicinity. The hazards of such an informal operation to both sperm and egg are obvious. The reptilian egg, however, enters the world already fertilized, and packaged against a certain amount of environmental adversity. One need only compare the dozen or so eggs laid by the average lizard with the thousands laid by toads to see the great economy the new method has brought.

But even an egg with a shell is delicate. It can incubate successfully only within a narrow range of conditions of temperature, humidity and concealment. It is thus not surprising to find that a few reptiles have independently hit upon the recourse that we think of as one of the main attributes of the mammals – that of producing living young.

A fertile sea turtle lays round in a hole it has dug in warm, incubating sand of Australia’s Great barrier Reef. When about 100 eggs are laid, it will cover the hole and depart. During one breeding season a mature female will deposit from two to five clutches.

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Handling Your Iguana

Saturday, July 31st, 2010

Learning to handle your iguana correctly is very important. Never simply grab the animal; always be gentle but firm, and make no sudden moves that could frighten it. Remember that an iguana’s tail can break easily, so never pick one by the tail.

Tame iguanas can be encouraged to climb onto your arm, but otherwise pick up your animal by firmly holding it from above. Larger animals, or those that are not so tame, should be picked up using one hand behind the animal’s neck and one hand at the base of the tail. Confidence is the key to proper handling, and your animal will soon learn to respond to you.

Daily handling from a young age should ensure that your iguana becomes tame and used to you, but allow for a settling-in period so that your pet becomes confident in its new home.

Children should always be supervised by an adult when handling even young iguanas. Very large iguanas are best handled only by adults.

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Water Bowl

Monday, July 26th, 2010

When you first bring your iguana home, it may be necessary to include a hide box in the cage. This provides a retreat if the animal feels nervous, and it can be removed once the iguana feels secure in its new home. You can also include decorative items such as plants. You could use live plants, but they will probably be eaten by the iguanas or destroyed by their sharp claws, so artificial plants are a better alternative. If you do choose live plants, make sure they are not toxic.

You will also need a large water bowl for the animal to drink from and bathe in. Iguanas frequently defecate in their water bowl, so check regularly to make sure the water is clean at all times.

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Provide Variety in Your Iguana’s Diet

Thursday, July 22nd, 2010

Iguanas, particularly young animals that are growing fast, are prone to metabolic bone disease due to lack of calcium in their diet, so it is important to take this into account when feeding. Calcium-rich plant material should make up at least 35 percent of the diet and includes items such as greens, alfalfa, kale, dandelion (both flowers and leaves will be taken eagerly by iguanas), green beans, and Chinese cabbage. Most lizards, including iguanas, require a 2:1 calcium/phosphorus ratio, and because many fruits and vegetables have a high phosphorus level, the calcium-rich items are doubly important.

Most other fruits and vegetables will also be eaten by iguanas. Commonly used items include frozen mixed vegetables (thawed), carrots, bananas, tomatoes, grapes, and lettuce. Experiment with as many different foods as possible to give your animals an interesting and varied diet. Members of the cabbage family should be fed sparingly because they can cause thyroid problems if given in large quantities.

Commercial iguana foods are now available, but should make up no more than 15 percent of the total diet.

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Feeding Your Iguana:How Often to Feed

Monday, July 19th, 2010

Young animals should be fed twice daily and adults can be reduced to one daily feeding. Make sure food is of the correct consistency, that is, finely chop all foods for young animals. Around 2 ounces (57 g) of finely chopped vegetable material should suffice for a baby iguana. If your animal finishes all its food quickly, increase the quantity, but if it leaves most of its food untouched, reduce the amount. If the iguana is growing and putting on weight, you have got the quantity right.  A good rule of thumb is to feed your iguana as much as it can eat in an hour and remove any uneaten items. Feed your iguana as much as it can eat within an hour.

Did You Know?

Iguanas cannot change their color like chameleons, but coloration and pattern will become more vivid under natural sunlight or broad-spectrum fluorescent light.
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