Axolotl x-ray

mem1718

New member
Joined
Jan 27, 2014
Messages
2
Reaction score
0
Points
0
Location
Madison, Wisconsin
Country
United States
Hey all,

I was a derp and put rocks in the bottom of my axolotl's (Quetzalcoatl's) tank. He ingested two of them, and I thought I'd post a picture as further warning to other derps like me. Even big rocks can be ingested.

I do have a question about diet, however. The vet said I should feed Quetzalcoatl two cubes of bloodworms per day. What do you guys feed your axolotls?
 

Attachments

  • rads.jpg
    rads.jpg
    187.4 KB · Views: 6,395
i think u need to let those rocks pass first
also, i dont like bloodworms for adult axolotls, way too messy
instead, try earthworms or roaches
 
I hope those stones pass.. Otherwise vet intervention will be needed. If things don't pass soon try fridging the lotl.

I feed my axolotls, both babies and adults earthworms. It's the best nutrition they can get. Earthworms and axolotl/salmon pellets.

Bloodworms are messy, he will most likely eat of the floor and ingest sand/gravel off your tank and will foul your water causes bad water quality.
 
Earthworms. Feed earthworms. You can treat them with pellets or occasionally feeder fish (as long as you make sure they aren't carrying diseases or parasites) and some people also treat shrimp.

I would recommend roaches, personally. I try to limit anything with bones or exoskeletons.

But earthworms. Seriously. They're cheap, clean, and extremely nutritious.
 
Thanks, guys! For some reason, I thought feeding earthworms was bad, but I will definitely switch to them now.

One of the stones has actually been in his digestive tract for 2 months now. The vet I took him to specializes in endoscopy, so hopefully he'll be healthy soon.
 
Earthworms. Feed earthworms. You can treat them with pellets or occasionally feeder fish (as long as you make sure they aren't carrying diseases or parasites) and some people also treat shrimp.

I would recommend roaches, personally. I try to limit anything with bones or exoskeletons.

But earthworms. Seriously. They're cheap, clean, and extremely nutritious.


I just noticed a typo. I would not recommend roaches. I'd be worried about them biting my axolotl, also I'd be worried about diseases or parasites. Perhaps it's unfounded paranoia, but roaches just seem much dirtier...

But it's still personal choice. I think people feed them to tigers, so whatever you feel like, I guess.
 
Saw that x-ray on tumblr :( poor thing. Good job taking it to the vet and correcting the problem however, I appluad you for learning from it. As the others said, earthworms are the most appropriate food for your lotl. Bloodworms aren't a good food for adults. Also adults don't need to eat that often - theyre usually fed about three times a week with one big, juicy worm or a couple of smaller ones.
 
my axolotls had a steady diet of bloodworms for a year
I did switch to earthworms as they are much easier to feed and are not nearly as messy

when feeding bloodworms to reduce the mess use a feeding jar
right now i cant use a feeding jar so i wind up doing a water change every couple days to get rid of the left over blood worms
as everyone has said, theyre just messy :p
 
Also adults don't need to eat that often - theyre usually fed about three times a week with one big, juicy worm or a couple of smaller ones.

This depends on different axolotls. As long as your axolotls head is as wide as it's body it's healthy - and to maintain that weight the amount of worms differ. My wildtype had 3ish worms every second day to maintain his weight, my leucistic had 1 every 2 days to maintain weight. The worms were adults of the same type and length.

If your axolotl is a bit skinny, much feed more, if it's a little on the plump size - cut back.
 
General chit-chat
Help Users
  • No one is chatting at the moment.
  • rreu:
    z
    +1
    Unlike
  • Dnurnberg:
    Hello. I just noticed two notches, white small bubbles on the hind legs of one of my male newts.
    +2
    Unlike
  • Dnurnberg:
    I'm trying to put the l
    +1
    Unlike
  • FragileCorpse:
    Hey everyone, just want a little advice. Its 55 - 60 celcius in my Salamanders tank. Hes curled up and tyring ti bury himself, Im assuming hes too cold. I was wondering if he would benefit from a heated rock cave (since he LOVES his cave) that I could set on low? I NEVER see him curled up and trying to bury himself unless his tank sits at 63 degrees celcius or lower. So I am assuming hes a little uncomfortable.
    +1
    Unlike
  • FragileCorpse:
    He also seems a little sluggish, again, assuming hes cold. Having heating trouble with the new house right now. What do we think? Was thinking of grabbing this for him since its got very low, medium, and higher medium heat settings that exude heat downward inside the rock cave but ALSO exudes it UPWARDS outside of the rock cave, effectively keeping the tank itself a little warm. Seems like it miiiight be a little small for him though, my guy is about 7 inches from tip of his nose tothe tip of his tail. What do we think? https://www.amazon.com/Reptile-Simulation-Adjustable-Temperature-Tortoise/dp/B0CH1DPGBC
    +1
    Unlike
  • FragileCorpse:
    I also asked this as an actual question in a thread in case anyone wants to answer it there instead of here
    +1
    Unlike
    FragileCorpse: I also asked this as an actual question in a thread in case anyone wants to answer it there... +1
    Back
    Top