So I've read enough on here to know that leos will eat their shed, either A) to not give up their location to predators in the wild, or B) for nutrients.
My question is, do all of your leos eat all their shed?? SoCo seems absolutely healthy in every way, hes a good eater, a regular with his potty times, active and inquisitive, sheds within an hour with very minimal help on his back toes....
And yet every time he shed, I notice he leaves me a little more. The first time, he ate it all. Last time, he left me a piece about the size of a thumbnail in his moss (I figured he hadn't seen it...). He shed last night and I watched him...just because I love watching him do anything...and he pulled it off his tail, calmly set it in the middle of his cage, looked at it, sniffed it, and meandered away like he was too good to eat it. lol.
This morning he was begging me for food at 6am, and yet the tail shed still sat, sticking straight up, in the middle of the enclosure. I'm going to go take it out, because its cleaning day...but what do you guys make of that? Is he just that comfortable that there are no predators.
My question is, do all of your leos eat all their shed?? SoCo seems absolutely healthy in every way, hes a good eater, a regular with his potty times, active and inquisitive, sheds within an hour with very minimal help on his back toes....
And yet every time he shed, I notice he leaves me a little more. The first time, he ate it all. Last time, he left me a piece about the size of a thumbnail in his moss (I figured he hadn't seen it...). He shed last night and I watched him...just because I love watching him do anything...and he pulled it off his tail, calmly set it in the middle of his cage, looked at it, sniffed it, and meandered away like he was too good to eat it. lol.
This morning he was begging me for food at 6am, and yet the tail shed still sat, sticking straight up, in the middle of the enclosure. I'm going to go take it out, because its cleaning day...but what do you guys make of that? Is he just that comfortable that there are no predators.