Ebenavia inunguis hatchling!

josse

New member
Finally my first Ebenavia inguis hatched today. I had some bad eggs at first, but hopefully some more good ones will follow soon! I will try to get some better pics one of these days. Enjoy!
Jesse
dsc0052mediumha2.jpg
 

the moof

New member
eeeeeeeeeee! I love them! it's so pretttty :shock: hehe.

and back to serious 8) , that is a beautiful animal, and Congratulations! I hope we see many more of these in future ;) keep us up to date on progress ;)

best regards,
Mark
 

alecfeldman

New member
incubation

Hi Josse,

Could you please share your incubation procedure. Temp., substrate, incubation period.

Thank you,
Alec
 

josse

New member
Thanks for all the kind words! The eggs were laid somewhere between the 5th and 15th of may. I only check for eggs a few times a week. I incubate them in dry sand. The reason why I do this is because the eggs are so small and can easily role over. When you put them in sand the chance of that is a little bit smaller (my own experience). Total incubation time would be around 60 days, not exactly sure though. Incubation temperature was between 28 and 28,3 degrees Celcius (82-82 F). I have some more eggs in the incubator so hopefully more on their way!

Jesse
 

alecfeldman

New member
incubation

Jesse,

Thank you for the information. I have a group of these and one of the females seems to be gravid. So, hopefully I'll be posting pics of babies down the line.

Thanks again,
Alec
 
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