Azhael
Site Contributor
- Joined
- May 7, 2007
- Messages
- 6,644
- Reaction score
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- Location
- Burgos
- Country
- Spain
- Display Name
- Rodrigo
No, Chris, please don´t hit me! Please! 
I keep my juvies and larvae without a light, they just get indirect light from a nearby tank, and i think that basically has the same effect as having cover for them to hide and feel secure. The two morphs show no signs of stress and are really rather bold for such young animals (specially considering these having been trained with hours of sweat and blood like previous generations).
I´m buying frozen Daphnia tomorrow! Back in Salamanca, the shop where i buy my stuff almost never has anything other than bloodworms and their prices are preposterous anyway. I´ll grab the opportunity to buy more varied stuff here at another shop and at much more reasonable prices. With any luck they´ll also have frozen gammarus which i´ve been after for a long time.
I´m definitely keeping an eye out for possible signs of stress or other possible concerns, but so far so good! Micronewt was happily munching on frozen bloodworms yesterday.
If all the juveniles adapt to this lifestyle well, i don´t think it´s necessarily a cause for captive adaptation since there would be no selection, UNLESS it has an epigenetic effect (which could be the case). I think it´s more likely that this is just a normal part of the physiological plasticity of these animals, after all, if at any point they are put on land, they´ll just shed and adapt the physiology of their skin like it´s nothing.
As you say, though, "not that any long-term CB populations stay the same as wild animals anyway".
I keep my juvies and larvae without a light, they just get indirect light from a nearby tank, and i think that basically has the same effect as having cover for them to hide and feel secure. The two morphs show no signs of stress and are really rather bold for such young animals (specially considering these having been trained with hours of sweat and blood like previous generations).
I´m buying frozen Daphnia tomorrow! Back in Salamanca, the shop where i buy my stuff almost never has anything other than bloodworms and their prices are preposterous anyway. I´ll grab the opportunity to buy more varied stuff here at another shop and at much more reasonable prices. With any luck they´ll also have frozen gammarus which i´ve been after for a long time.
I´m definitely keeping an eye out for possible signs of stress or other possible concerns, but so far so good! Micronewt was happily munching on frozen bloodworms yesterday.
If all the juveniles adapt to this lifestyle well, i don´t think it´s necessarily a cause for captive adaptation since there would be no selection, UNLESS it has an epigenetic effect (which could be the case). I think it´s more likely that this is just a normal part of the physiological plasticity of these animals, after all, if at any point they are put on land, they´ll just shed and adapt the physiology of their skin like it´s nothing.
As you say, though, "not that any long-term CB populations stay the same as wild animals anyway".