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Keeping Axolotls by Linda Adkins.
Interpet ISBN 978-1-84280-6215-5
Hardback,64 pages.
The author is a senior member of staff at Hertfordshire Fisheries, specialising in ponds, wildlife. She started out writing a short guide.
The book is very easy to read and well set out. Plenty of photos through out covering axolotl, development, tanks. plants foods and so on.. She covered setting up the tank, cycling etc really well. The development of the eggs and larvae where helpful too . Over all as a guide to keeping axolotl , I found the book very helpful.
There where a number of areas however caused mild concern. Early in the book in a chapter headed 'Metamorphosis and peculiarities' she says the axolotl can spontaneously turn into a salamander, She describes ways that this may be achieved, but does stress that they may well be short lived and are less interesting.
The substrate she advises is 4-6.5 mm pea gravel ( small rounded gravel), she does not recommend sand as this can lodge in the stomach and cause death.
In the feeding section she suggests pond dipping, spring time is great as you can catch tadpoles to feed your axolotl.
One point that she does mention fairly often is how sociable axolotl are, that they can form strong bonds with their tank mates and on occasion may pine if one is removed. I found her comments here interesting.
Interpet ISBN 978-1-84280-6215-5
Hardback,64 pages.
The author is a senior member of staff at Hertfordshire Fisheries, specialising in ponds, wildlife. She started out writing a short guide.
The book is very easy to read and well set out. Plenty of photos through out covering axolotl, development, tanks. plants foods and so on.. She covered setting up the tank, cycling etc really well. The development of the eggs and larvae where helpful too . Over all as a guide to keeping axolotl , I found the book very helpful.
There where a number of areas however caused mild concern. Early in the book in a chapter headed 'Metamorphosis and peculiarities' she says the axolotl can spontaneously turn into a salamander, She describes ways that this may be achieved, but does stress that they may well be short lived and are less interesting.
The substrate she advises is 4-6.5 mm pea gravel ( small rounded gravel), she does not recommend sand as this can lodge in the stomach and cause death.
In the feeding section she suggests pond dipping, spring time is great as you can catch tadpoles to feed your axolotl.
One point that she does mention fairly often is how sociable axolotl are, that they can form strong bonds with their tank mates and on occasion may pine if one is removed. I found her comments here interesting.