Idnar196
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- May 12, 2022
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- Location
- Grand Rapids, MI
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I wanted to post here what I have done and what I am doing to raise eastern newts form eggs.
Feel free to comment with further suggestions of things I could be doing different.
I'm hoping someone can learn from my mistakes.
I have 2 females and 1 male eastern newt kept together. I work for a science academy. As one of the kids projects they built a 10 gallon temporary tank for one of the female newts. After a few days she began to lay eggs on the fake plants in that 10 gal aquarium. The artificial plants were removed and placed in a separate 10 gal aquarium with guppy weed and sponge filter and Ramshorn snails. They began to hatch on 3/24/22.
They were not intentionally bred, and I had no experience prior to this.
As they hatched they were placed in medium Kritter Keepers (1.75gal) with about 2" of water in groups of 5. Guppy weed, daphnia, and snails were added to the containers as well.
I am only able to come into work M-F, and was doing water changes MWF. On top of caring for the other 200 animals in my care I needed something easier to maintain.
I then moved 36 of them into this breeding tower to hopefully make water changes easier.
A total of 50 hatched out.
This is what they looked like at hatching.
The other 14 were left in the full 10 gal with the guppy weed and bubbler. I put daphnia in there and then simply ignored it for a very long time. I did not ever do water changes on it and only topped it off with more RO water.
In the "newt tower" they were able to flow down into the bottom chamber and swim freely between cells.
I fed infrequently (MWF), and mostly daphnia with occasional instant BBS (Ocean Nutrition).
The newts in the tower grew MUCH slower than the newts in the tank.
At this point the tower newts were still only 1cm while those in the tank were at least 2x the size, at nearly 1".
At this point I gave away all 25 of the remaining newts from in the tower to other hobbyists on Caudata.org.
I do not know what happened to the other 16 that were placed in the tower. I never found any deceased newts, so I assume they cannibalized one another.
To prevent this from happening further I took the remaining 14 newts in the 10gal and placed each one in a 16oz deli container with guppy weed and pieces of the artificial plant from their cycled tank on Friday.
At this time I fed each one with a small amount of instant BBS and daphnia.
When I came back on Monday 3 were deceased. I placed the largest newt back in the original 10 gal hoping that he would be fine in there alone. I immediately did 100% water change on the remaining 10 newts and then floated the containers in a larger Rubbermaid tote full of water so that the temperature would remained more stable.
On Tuesday (5/31) morning 2 more were deceased. I was panicked. I placed one more in the 10 gal (2 total). The other 7 I placed in size matched pairs in Large Kritter Keeprs (3gal) with 2 inches of water in the bottom. I then placed more guppy weed, the artificial plant pieces. Ramshorn snails, daphnia, and a few pieces of gravel from other established tanks. I then placed bubbler line in each tank and placed a fan over all the tanks to lower the temperature slightly.
I think that the instant BBS could have been part of the problem, so I placed only daphnia and a few blackworms in the tanks.
Today I did a 80% water change and all of 7 newts in the kritter keepers were alive and well.
one of the newts in the 10gal was deceased and the other appeared bloated and lethargic, I am not optimistic for his survival given the events of this week.
While the newts had not been in the tank I was dumping the extra instant BBS and daphnia in there to keep it cycled. This may have caused there to be too much ammonia in the water. or they could have eaten some spoiled BBS.
I removed all debris and did a 80% water change on the 10 gal. in hopes that that newt will pull through. I will not be using instant BBS in the future.
I will try to post updates occasionally on this thread and welcome any feedback on my current set up.
Feel free to comment with further suggestions of things I could be doing different.
I'm hoping someone can learn from my mistakes.
I have 2 females and 1 male eastern newt kept together. I work for a science academy. As one of the kids projects they built a 10 gallon temporary tank for one of the female newts. After a few days she began to lay eggs on the fake plants in that 10 gal aquarium. The artificial plants were removed and placed in a separate 10 gal aquarium with guppy weed and sponge filter and Ramshorn snails. They began to hatch on 3/24/22.
They were not intentionally bred, and I had no experience prior to this.
As they hatched they were placed in medium Kritter Keepers (1.75gal) with about 2" of water in groups of 5. Guppy weed, daphnia, and snails were added to the containers as well.
I am only able to come into work M-F, and was doing water changes MWF. On top of caring for the other 200 animals in my care I needed something easier to maintain.
I then moved 36 of them into this breeding tower to hopefully make water changes easier.
A total of 50 hatched out.
This is what they looked like at hatching.
The other 14 were left in the full 10 gal with the guppy weed and bubbler. I put daphnia in there and then simply ignored it for a very long time. I did not ever do water changes on it and only topped it off with more RO water.
In the "newt tower" they were able to flow down into the bottom chamber and swim freely between cells.
I fed infrequently (MWF), and mostly daphnia with occasional instant BBS (Ocean Nutrition).
The newts in the tower grew MUCH slower than the newts in the tank.
At this point the tower newts were still only 1cm while those in the tank were at least 2x the size, at nearly 1".
At this point I gave away all 25 of the remaining newts from in the tower to other hobbyists on Caudata.org.
I do not know what happened to the other 16 that were placed in the tower. I never found any deceased newts, so I assume they cannibalized one another.
To prevent this from happening further I took the remaining 14 newts in the 10gal and placed each one in a 16oz deli container with guppy weed and pieces of the artificial plant from their cycled tank on Friday.
At this time I fed each one with a small amount of instant BBS and daphnia.
When I came back on Monday 3 were deceased. I placed the largest newt back in the original 10 gal hoping that he would be fine in there alone. I immediately did 100% water change on the remaining 10 newts and then floated the containers in a larger Rubbermaid tote full of water so that the temperature would remained more stable.
On Tuesday (5/31) morning 2 more were deceased. I was panicked. I placed one more in the 10 gal (2 total). The other 7 I placed in size matched pairs in Large Kritter Keeprs (3gal) with 2 inches of water in the bottom. I then placed more guppy weed, the artificial plant pieces. Ramshorn snails, daphnia, and a few pieces of gravel from other established tanks. I then placed bubbler line in each tank and placed a fan over all the tanks to lower the temperature slightly.
I think that the instant BBS could have been part of the problem, so I placed only daphnia and a few blackworms in the tanks.
Today I did a 80% water change and all of 7 newts in the kritter keepers were alive and well.
one of the newts in the 10gal was deceased and the other appeared bloated and lethargic, I am not optimistic for his survival given the events of this week.
While the newts had not been in the tank I was dumping the extra instant BBS and daphnia in there to keep it cycled. This may have caused there to be too much ammonia in the water. or they could have eaten some spoiled BBS.
I removed all debris and did a 80% water change on the 10 gal. in hopes that that newt will pull through. I will not be using instant BBS in the future.
I will try to post updates occasionally on this thread and welcome any feedback on my current set up.