Franquixote
Established Member
I have a colony of orange heads which are being kept under what I believe are ideal conditions. Lots of room, fresh food and a good gel water source (along with a little condensation on 1-2 sides for fresh droplets of water). The problem is that if I give them a small amount of animal protein in the form of either a gutload with poultry products or their absolute favorite which is the Mazuri "Better Feeder" chow which has a variety of animal proteins (pork blood, poultry, and fish at least) they will lay off the nymphs a bit but then I risk gout when feeding them to my panther. If I dial back the animal protein then they eat every last nymph.
I have a colony of dubias which are showing explosive growth being gutloaded with just a variety of healthy non-animal food so I don't think I am doing something fundamentally wrong.
The orange heads enclosure is twice as big- a 40 quart Sterilite with about 8 egg crate type structures - actually coffee cup holders which they like because they can crawl through them and it doesn't trap moisture the same way egg crates do- and there are about 40 adults minimum.
They even go after small tank mates if not given their animal protein.
Seems like a no-win situation! I was thinking I could give them a lot of animal protein and then separate the nymphs, but to be honest I'm not sure that they are THAT much different from the dubias nutritionally speaking, especially if I put the nymphs on a low protein diet.
I'm considering closing shop on them. I'm stretched thin already with the time, effort, and money I have for the chameleon and thinking that a colony of walking sticks might be a better use of resources.
Thoughts?
I have a colony of dubias which are showing explosive growth being gutloaded with just a variety of healthy non-animal food so I don't think I am doing something fundamentally wrong.
The orange heads enclosure is twice as big- a 40 quart Sterilite with about 8 egg crate type structures - actually coffee cup holders which they like because they can crawl through them and it doesn't trap moisture the same way egg crates do- and there are about 40 adults minimum.
They even go after small tank mates if not given their animal protein.
Seems like a no-win situation! I was thinking I could give them a lot of animal protein and then separate the nymphs, but to be honest I'm not sure that they are THAT much different from the dubias nutritionally speaking, especially if I put the nymphs on a low protein diet.
I'm considering closing shop on them. I'm stretched thin already with the time, effort, and money I have for the chameleon and thinking that a colony of walking sticks might be a better use of resources.
Thoughts?