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- Dec 13, 2006
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I'm going to relate something horrible, and only because I might have done something worse. I'm embarassed to relate this, but it's also fascinating. Yesterday I fed my verrucosus morphs, as I do every day, and I inadvertently put the food container on top of one of my newts' heads. I really try to be careful because I did something like this before, but not as bad, but obviously I was not careful enough. Unless maybe the newt crawled underneath and the bowl shifted. So today I was examining my morphs before feeding and I found him, his head was squashed. Not just a little, but thin, like 1-2 mm on one side, and the other side, not much larger. There was moisture around the head like I squashed his eye out, and I was sure it was dead. But then I noticed his limbs were still moving. I can't tell you how grossed out and horrified I was, especially that it was still alive. And ill and angry at myself. So I thought I would have to somehow euthanize this creature, since it was still moving. I stepped back and fed some other animals for a while until I could deal with it. After about ten minutes, I went back and I swear his head had half filled back up. Ten minutes later and his eye popped back in place. There is a thin red line along his mouth, like blood, but he's moved back in the bunch with the other newts, twice, because when I examined him both times I put him separate, and both times he moved back to the group. Of course I will check him often but it looks possible that he may live.
I almost did something worse to him by euthanizing him and here it's possible he may actually survive.
The other time, I'd put the bowl on top of the animal, and I found it later and it was half flattened with moisture around its body (like the fluid was squashed out) and after a week I couldn't tell it from the other newts anymore and it's been maybe two months now and he survived. I'm not proud of this, in fact horrified, but fascinated at their ability to recover.
I almost did something worse to him by euthanizing him and here it's possible he may actually survive.
The other time, I'd put the bowl on top of the animal, and I found it later and it was half flattened with moisture around its body (like the fluid was squashed out) and after a week I couldn't tell it from the other newts anymore and it's been maybe two months now and he survived. I'm not proud of this, in fact horrified, but fascinated at their ability to recover.
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