nightanole
Chameleon Enthusiast
So in the wild the whole clutch hatches at once and makes a run for it. In captivity it can take days or more.
Well while watching some tegu breeding videos i came upon this tip. They have all the eggs touching each other, and they do not bury the eggs. And they do not remove the hatchlings for maybe a day or so. I guess with tegus, even though they are ready to come out, they "sleep". Once one of them hatches, they run around on top of the other eggs, and "wake" the others up, and the whole clutch just kinda hatches at about the same time.
While ive never bred chams, it seems the standard incubator setup is each egg is buried with at least 1 eggs width apart of media. This is completly different vs the "ball of eggs" in the wild. So do breeders space the to prevent mold, or eggs sticking to each other, or just easy of placement?
It seems plausible that if all the eggs are kinda stuck to each other, when one wakes up, it disturbs the rest.
Well while watching some tegu breeding videos i came upon this tip. They have all the eggs touching each other, and they do not bury the eggs. And they do not remove the hatchlings for maybe a day or so. I guess with tegus, even though they are ready to come out, they "sleep". Once one of them hatches, they run around on top of the other eggs, and "wake" the others up, and the whole clutch just kinda hatches at about the same time.
While ive never bred chams, it seems the standard incubator setup is each egg is buried with at least 1 eggs width apart of media. This is completly different vs the "ball of eggs" in the wild. So do breeders space the to prevent mold, or eggs sticking to each other, or just easy of placement?
It seems plausible that if all the eggs are kinda stuck to each other, when one wakes up, it disturbs the rest.