Mine looks identical to the two posted here. Very green at rest and almost completely pink fired up. He does look like a lot of anks I have had in the past.
This is another variable we were thinking of trying. Gutload, in all cases was a variety of oranges, carrots, lettuce, potatoes and a few fruits. We give ours more D3 and multivitamin while prego. Calcium is another variable we are going to mess with.
There are so many variables that...
Steve Irwin did a study on crocs before he passed with different temps. Incubating at higher temps gave him roughly a 75-25 ratio. Male to female. It would be interesting to see if it happens with chams aswell.
The larger clutches with higher death rates seem to be mostly male deaths. In all cases there were more females than males that survived. Presently we are working on incubation temps to see if that makes a difference in the male to female ratio. Trying to see if the death rate changes aswell...
We have been experimenting with temps and food intake over the last year to see if it were possible to predict the amount of eggs laid. Here are some findings.
3-5 crix daily at 85F ambient temps, basking at 95F produced 15-20 eggs.
3-5 crix daily at 75F ambient temps, basking at 90F produced...
He is certainly a faly. I bet when he gets older that red will be much more abundant. I've seen it start in the face like that guy then gradually take over the white.
Yes the ones in the faly variants thread were all faly, including yours Rob. Unless you believe Bobbie wasnt now?:rolleyes: like I stated before you cant wish half are and half are not when from the same parents.
Usually they dont start experimenting until their teens. They just keep getting younger and younger.:rolleyes:. Puff, puff, give man............my mom will be so mad at me!:p
The ones under speculation were all CB specimins in the faly variants thread. If they were WC then I could see there being issues with females possibly. However the ones that were called crosses were some of the most beautiful white falys I had seen to date. Robmd1s Bobbie, Chameleon Alleys...
Unfortunately, to the best of my knowledge, they have been there for years. Hatch survival rates are lower in the wild than in captivity. Over the course of 4-5 years a decent number would have survived. As they spread throughout the island more and more will come in "tainted". Exporters would...