Happygecko
New member
Hi all of you!
I am new to Nephrurus spec. and I got my first amyae at the Hamm show just 2 weeks ago. I have experience in keeping Phelsuma and Paroedura picta, as well as R. ciliatus but these are my first Knob Tails so far....
I got a trio, with the older female beeing 8 months old and about 30 g in weight.
The younger female is around 14-15g and 6 months old, the male is 8 months and has around 13-14 g.
All are eating well and walk trough their enclosure at night. By now I keep all of them together. I figured I'd keep them all separated before I'll try breeding next year but the breeder told me I could keep them all together all year, since that's the way he does it, and it seems to work out fine for him.
But from other sides I heard of Amyae bitting and even killing each other. I am alarmed at that moment, not just because of the money loss that would cause but of the loss of such an amazing animal. It would really hurt me loosing one of them bc of a housing problem I have caused myself...
I just separated the smaller two in another enclosure. Now they are sitting there 1.1. and the biggest female all by herself.
I use a red desert sand from south africa (hererored), which is not 'digable'.
Is that wrong? Might that sand cause problems when swallowed with crickets?
How do you keep our amyae? as pairs all year long, or only separate in winter in order to get better breeding results and is it possible to keep two females together? Or do you keep them always by themselves and only pair them up for breeding
Someone just wrote me he keeps them as pairs, no females together, not bc of bitting but bc of better breeding outcome. And he said he separated them during winter months bc otherwise his pairs would not breed at all...
Have you had problems yet with amyae bitting each other?
I hope you can help me, since I just wanna do everything as right as possible, and not loose one of them....
Thank you for reading.... Cindy
Here some pics:
the sand we use:
the set up:
I am new to Nephrurus spec. and I got my first amyae at the Hamm show just 2 weeks ago. I have experience in keeping Phelsuma and Paroedura picta, as well as R. ciliatus but these are my first Knob Tails so far....
I got a trio, with the older female beeing 8 months old and about 30 g in weight.
The younger female is around 14-15g and 6 months old, the male is 8 months and has around 13-14 g.
All are eating well and walk trough their enclosure at night. By now I keep all of them together. I figured I'd keep them all separated before I'll try breeding next year but the breeder told me I could keep them all together all year, since that's the way he does it, and it seems to work out fine for him.
But from other sides I heard of Amyae bitting and even killing each other. I am alarmed at that moment, not just because of the money loss that would cause but of the loss of such an amazing animal. It would really hurt me loosing one of them bc of a housing problem I have caused myself...
I just separated the smaller two in another enclosure. Now they are sitting there 1.1. and the biggest female all by herself.
I use a red desert sand from south africa (hererored), which is not 'digable'.
Is that wrong? Might that sand cause problems when swallowed with crickets?
How do you keep our amyae? as pairs all year long, or only separate in winter in order to get better breeding results and is it possible to keep two females together? Or do you keep them always by themselves and only pair them up for breeding
Someone just wrote me he keeps them as pairs, no females together, not bc of bitting but bc of better breeding outcome. And he said he separated them during winter months bc otherwise his pairs would not breed at all...
Have you had problems yet with amyae bitting each other?
I hope you can help me, since I just wanna do everything as right as possible, and not loose one of them....
Thank you for reading.... Cindy
Here some pics:


the sand we use:

the set up:
