Incubating at a Constant or a Variable Temp?

yankfanthom

Established Member
I'm just looking to see who has had more success with hatch rates. Do you use variable temp to create diapause or do you stay at a constant for the entire term?
 
I've always incubated at a slightly variable temperature. I've had almost 100% hatching of all fertile eggs. I can't say it caused a diapause.
 
Diapause always occurs for non-montanes- that's why the huge variation in incubation duration. The trick is ending it.

I've tried a number of different ways. I used to use daily temperature swings from low 80s days to low 70s nights and that gave incubation times around 6-7 months, which seems to roughly be what some of the newer techniques get by incubating warm for a couple of weeks, cold for a couple of months and then warm again for the duration. I've been lazy the past 10 years or so and just keep most of them in a cabinet under the sink at room temperature. Incubation duration varies wildly from ~6.5 to ~11 months. Mostly ~7 or 8 months. The longest were pardalis 13 months.

I haven't seen any big difference in hatch rate regardless of the method I have used. I believe that constant warm temps would decrease the hatch rate though.
 
Kinyonga-I'm currently going at about 74 degrees with 90% humidity. How many degrees do you vary by and how often?
 
I set the temperature at aabout 74F. My incubator isn't normal...its open to the room....which is why I get varied temperatures because as the room heats and cools it will affect the eggs in the container slightly too. I never measure the highs and lows that it gets to inside the containers but I would think it wouldn't change by more than 4 degrees up and down.
 
Diapause always occurs for non-montanes- that's why the huge variation in incubation duration. The trick is ending it.

I've tried a number of different ways. I used to use daily temperature swings from low 80s days to low 70s nights and that gave incubation times around 6-7 months, which seems to roughly be what some of the newer techniques get by incubating warm for a couple of weeks, cold for a couple of months and then warm again for the duration. I've been lazy the past 10 years or so and just keep most of them in a cabinet under the sink at room temperature. Incubation duration varies wildly from ~6.5 to ~11 months. Mostly ~7 or 8 months. The longest were pardalis 13 months.

I haven't seen any big difference in hatch rate regardless of the method I have used. I believe that constant warm temps would decrease the hatch rate though.

When you keep them warm for a couple of weeks, then cool them down for a couple of months, how cool should you keep them and for how many months??
 
Thanks for finding that post for me! I have it all written down and will try it with this next clutch:)
 
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