noneofmany
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- Jun 21, 2012
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- Edmonds, WA
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Since I've been doing a little reading on Paramesotriton captive care and would like to try breeding them (their so rare in captivity is seems like a shame for someone to get them and not breed them), I need some advice on how to house them individually.
My plan is to keep the males alone in 25 gallon aquariums while the females would be together in a 75 gallon tank.
I assume three females and two males would be the simplest minimum number for breeding purposes and would leave just thee tanks with same care requirements.
However, I also don't want the males in the tank with the females any longer than they need to be so until their ready to go they will remain separated.
The thing is I don't know how their going toit's time to mate with the females unless they actually know their there and that their females.
I'm worried they wouldn't have time to recognize each other until their nose to nose and would just fight without even thinking about it.
So I thought of having their aquariums right next to each other in such a way that they can look at each other and be aware of the other animals presence before their put together.
Has anyone tried this or some other method to keep them separate them without causing catastrophic surprise when their put together?
what about chemical signals? Would it help If I put some of the water in the females tank into the males?
Or better yet, a segmented tank. Something that keeps the newts in the same water system of a very large aquarium but still lets them see and smell each other.
How do you avoid warty vs warty aggression without making them unfamiliar with each other?
My plan is to keep the males alone in 25 gallon aquariums while the females would be together in a 75 gallon tank.
I assume three females and two males would be the simplest minimum number for breeding purposes and would leave just thee tanks with same care requirements.
However, I also don't want the males in the tank with the females any longer than they need to be so until their ready to go they will remain separated.
The thing is I don't know how their going toit's time to mate with the females unless they actually know their there and that their females.
I'm worried they wouldn't have time to recognize each other until their nose to nose and would just fight without even thinking about it.
So I thought of having their aquariums right next to each other in such a way that they can look at each other and be aware of the other animals presence before their put together.
Has anyone tried this or some other method to keep them separate them without causing catastrophic surprise when their put together?
what about chemical signals? Would it help If I put some of the water in the females tank into the males?
Or better yet, a segmented tank. Something that keeps the newts in the same water system of a very large aquarium but still lets them see and smell each other.
How do you avoid warty vs warty aggression without making them unfamiliar with each other?