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I wouldn’t think they would move enough to catch a chams attention, how do you present them to your Cham?You can get helix aspersa fairly easy. They are supposed to breed fast, but I've been having problems. I think my temperatures were off, so I have them outside now in the shade with minimal ventilation and no cuc(to avoid the eggs being eaten). Hoping this works out. They apparently benefit from protein too so I'm thinking of offering them a dead roach or something along with garden veggies and a cuttlebone for calcium.
Snails also shouldn't be cleaned all that often, but at the same time may not reproduce if too many snail trails are present. So I'll probably wipe down the sides every once and awhile, but leave the substrate as is.
I gotta see this...Yes, it's made of calcium. Same thing with isopods. They make crunchy calcium rich snacks
I usually keep mine around 80 degrees. I keep mine inside because I don't want to risk some wild insect getting into the enclosure and infecting my stock with some sort of parasite or/and larva.@Bush baby that's pretty much exactly how my set up is. I just have a lot more adults, but in a larger bin. For the longest time I kept giant canyon isos in with them. I suspect they were eating the eggs. What temp do you keep them at? Mine are outside now(pennsylvania) where it's 80s-90 during day, 60s-70s at night. Also very humid here most of the time.
No, I keep them by themselves. I assume those tank mates help keep down the waste/decaying matter?@Bush baby I thought about that, but they tend to carry lungworm, but that's only if they eat feces from certain animals. So I figured it should be fine.
Curious, do you keep any CuC with them? Like springtails?