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Put me on your wait list when these are ready to sell!! A big congratulations!! These could be the first Yellow Lip Parsonii babies to hatch in the USA/North America.
Best Regards
Jeremy A. Rich
I have to agree with you I do think it's the first ever hatch Yellow lip in the state and it's a great achievement. If only we had a group of individuals working with this color morph we will be able to establish a nice colony here in the state...
I have to agree with you I do think it's the first ever hatch Yellow lip in the state and it's a great achievement. If only we had a group of individuals working with this color morph we will be able to establish a nice colony here in the state...
I agree with this statement, but we all know the requirements for bloodlines, housing needs, experienced keepers, and much more. What you need is a zoo management system to really make a successful colony of this particular species. We're not talking about lizards that only get about 5 inches long and you keep multiple individuals together, we're talking about animals that are about the size of a large guinea pig that don't do well being within sight of the next one.
While not impossible, it always comes down to the animal getting into the right hands. Too bad Atlas is an Orange Eye or I'd be interested in a female in few years. I'm not fond of crossing different regions, but on a serious note I'm sure they can cross breed. Then again this is my bucket list, so maybe I'd go for it anyway.
Thanks for agreeing with me!
Ah crap, I agreed with Jeremy? Nobody will associate with me anymore. Damn it! <Goes back to cave, closes boulder>
Ah crap, I agreed with Jeremy? Nobody will associate with me anymore. Damn it! <Goes back to cave, closes boulder>
Ralph do not beat you self up over it. People agree with me.
Best Regards
Jeremy A. Rich
Quick update:
All three Yellow-lips that hatched initially were in the same (top) incubation bin. There are two bins--one on top, one on the bottom, inside the incubator. Based on my personal experience with hatching various other cham species, once one hatches, it sure seems to signal the others to hatch, especially with Veileds. I've read this may be chemical-based?
Anyhow, yesterday I took one of the empty hatched eggs and placed it into the bottom incubation bin, just in case there is anything chemical-related that emits from the now empty egg. Oddly enough, there was a hatchling that appeared inside the bottom bin about 30 minutes ago (about 18 hours later).
One may have absolutely nothing to do with the other, and the egg was going to hatch at that time regardless. Just thought it was worth mentioning, and curious if anyone else has experimented with this method or something similar. Maybe a fresh hatchling walking around the unhatched eggs has more chemical effect than the empty egg itself. Perhaps I'm way off base and it doesn't matter either way. Just contemplating.
Best regards,
Sam