MeruJack
Avid Member
Wow, do I have babies! Thirteen days ago one of my Mt. Meru girls gave birth to 6 babies. Then, today, my sole jacksonii jacksonii female gave birth to 17 babies. Luckily, I had suspected that three of my females might be gravid so I read up on everything I could here on the forums regarding the care of Jackson's babies. I even planted three 12x12x18 inch terrariums in preparation. The third female that I thought was gravid recently "gave birth" to about 9 infertile "eggs." Like I said, I have been reading up on everything I can find regarding the care of Jackson's babies and have changed several aspects of my husbandry in order to obtain a higher survival rate than the expected 20%. I have decided to use glass enclosures (6 Meru in one and, since one female ended up not giving birth, I split the 17 jacksonii born today into the remaining 2 enclosures). I have decided to plant the enclosures in organic soil and cham-friendly plants. The Meru babies have a 25 watt bulb on for the first 5.5 hours of the day to bring up the heat after a nightly drop into the mid-60's. They have an older UVB light 12 hours a day. It usually stays between 72 & 76 degrees with humidity usually between 60 & 80%. I am also feeding them differently. One of the forum members wrote about putting a cup/colony of fruit flies in the baby enclosure each day so that the babies have access to food all day long. I have plenty of fruit fly and bean beetle colonies currently in bloom. Each day I choose a bean beetle colony, remove the lid and replace it with a second lid with a hole in it, stick a dowel in the hole and put the whole colony into the enclosure before I leave for work at 7:30 am. When I get home at 4:00, I remove the bean beetle colony which still has beetles trickling out and up the dowel. I water the enclosure and add a good helping of fruit flies for dinner. Lights go out at 6:30 pm. So far so good with the Meru babies. They started eating and drinking the first time I fed them which is an improvement over my old method for care. Then I came home from work today to find the jacksonii jacksonii babies. I have had the mom for about 6 weeks and knew that she was most likely gravid the minute she emerged from the box she was shipped in. She was black when I got home. I removed her from her enclosure until I had removed all the babies and sprayed her enclosure. I put her back in and added some crickets and she greened right up. Luckily, I have a three-day-weekend starting tomorrow so I can keep a close eye on them for a few days.
Merumontanus
Sibling rivalry already
Merumontanus
Merumontanus
Merumontanus
Jacksonii jacksonii
Jacksonii jacksonii
Jacksonii jacksonii
Jacksonii enclosures
Jacksonii jacksonii mom today









