I have been waiting for this feeling for a long time!

t_summ

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Travis Summers
I arrived home tonight and entered my cave to do my routine work with the various aquatic critters I have and I was shocked to find little newt "taco's" in my tank. I did not think that the female I had was actually going to start laying even though she began to get very plump in late December. What a feeling this is! I know for a fact that I am hooked for life. I hope everyone experiences the same feeling at some point in their life. Just wanted to share.
 
Sorry about that. I was so excited and tired that I just forgot about that. These are my T. karelinii. Hopefully I will see decent numbers of surviving larvae.
 
I shot this video with my camera last night. I think it is amazing how the male is positioned and continues to try and "woo" his lady. By the way, the voice you hear is my goofball little brother's.

 
It is a great feeling good luck.
 
Hey! Congrats! I am not Familiar with that type? How many eggs do you suspect will live?
 
That is mostly depends on how many she lays minus fifty percent (genetic mortality rate). I would not be surprised if she layed 300 eggs!

That would actually be pretty neat.
 
What do you think you're going to do with the extra eggs? If you decide to give some away, I am looking for three or four babies
 
I am glad to hear that Travis. I hope things go well with your first batch of eggs. My larvae are currently in metamorphosis, how are yours doing?
 
Hi Patrick. I ended up only having about 5 that made it. A lot of the others perished about 2 weeks after the hatch. They got all crooked and died, it was really weird. The surviving five are about to morph as well.

On another note, has anyone else noticed that there are certain plants that the females prefer to lay eggs on? I have elodea and bacopa in my tank and she only want to lay on the bacopa. I just find it interesting.
 
With this genus, 50% of the eggs die fairly quickly after fertilization anyway (due to some genetic issues). Which means out of 300 eggs, only 150 would have survived anyway. This is probably more than what would have survived in the wild.
 
Congrats, Travis. Yeah, you're hooked!
 
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  • rreu:
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  • Dnurnberg:
    Hello. I just noticed two notches, white small bubbles on the hind legs of one of my male newts.
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  • Dnurnberg:
    I'm trying to put the l
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  • 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.
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  • 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
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  • FragileCorpse:
    I also asked this as an actual question in a thread in case anyone wants to answer it there instead of here
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    FragileCorpse: I also asked this as an actual question in a thread in case anyone wants to answer it there... +1
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