Stellarreality
New member
I recently got 2 leopards, one sub-adult and one adult; male and female respectively. Well upon purchasing them I used cracked walnut shell as the substrate...I knew it wasn't the best but I felt like they had a less chance of eating that than sand. NOPE they immediately started taking little licks.
So I posted a thread asking if plywood could be a temp floor, well I went ahead and bought tile for the floors instead, and used sand to fill the cracks.
Both of them still had good appetites when I put the new floors in, I was hoping everything would be fine.
I watched their poop over the course of a few days, and noticed them pass all the walnut and then they started having solid poops.
Now this is where it all starts going down hill, today I woke up and my sub adult was dead. There were 2 large poops in their bathroom corner, both almost completely sand/superworm carapace. One had blood on the end of it, now I'm not sure if the bloody one was from the dead sub-adult or my still living adult...and I think it was from the one that's still alive.
Now before anyone says "impaction/sand eating might just be a symptom" I went ahead and autopsied the sub-adult...
To my dismay his stomach was completely filled with sand...I mean it literally looked as if he ate sand until he couldn't anymore...
This gecko was completely healthy, I had just got him from the store not even a week before. I know not all pet stores care for their animals, but I know first hand this one does.
Now I have the momma on paper towel, but I gave her a little tummy rub and I noticed there is a hard lump in the lower abdomen, and like I said I think the bloody stool was from her.
I'm just so confused, why would they actively eat sand...I'm feeding the sub-adult daily and offering the adult daily, and let them eat until they are content. I watch them drink water...I dust their roaches, crickets, and superworms with multi-vit...
Now I'm pretty sure the big one is going to die and there isn't shit I can do about it besides soft massages, warm soak, and paper towel substrate...
This pisses me off, I never even saw them eating sand; I saw the adult lick it once and that was it she seemed uninterested. It's just so aggravating after I spent all the damn money on them and they go and kill themselves before I can even put a stop to it. I'm just hoping I can intervene on the momma in time.
I could understand the momma eating sand being so used to repti-carpet, but I feel like the sub-adult should have transitions easily.
:-x
:-x
:-x
So I posted a thread asking if plywood could be a temp floor, well I went ahead and bought tile for the floors instead, and used sand to fill the cracks.
Both of them still had good appetites when I put the new floors in, I was hoping everything would be fine.
I watched their poop over the course of a few days, and noticed them pass all the walnut and then they started having solid poops.
Now this is where it all starts going down hill, today I woke up and my sub adult was dead. There were 2 large poops in their bathroom corner, both almost completely sand/superworm carapace. One had blood on the end of it, now I'm not sure if the bloody one was from the dead sub-adult or my still living adult...and I think it was from the one that's still alive.
Now before anyone says "impaction/sand eating might just be a symptom" I went ahead and autopsied the sub-adult...
To my dismay his stomach was completely filled with sand...I mean it literally looked as if he ate sand until he couldn't anymore...
This gecko was completely healthy, I had just got him from the store not even a week before. I know not all pet stores care for their animals, but I know first hand this one does.
Now I have the momma on paper towel, but I gave her a little tummy rub and I noticed there is a hard lump in the lower abdomen, and like I said I think the bloody stool was from her.
I'm just so confused, why would they actively eat sand...I'm feeding the sub-adult daily and offering the adult daily, and let them eat until they are content. I watch them drink water...I dust their roaches, crickets, and superworms with multi-vit...
Now I'm pretty sure the big one is going to die and there isn't shit I can do about it besides soft massages, warm soak, and paper towel substrate...
This pisses me off, I never even saw them eating sand; I saw the adult lick it once and that was it she seemed uninterested. It's just so aggravating after I spent all the damn money on them and they go and kill themselves before I can even put a stop to it. I'm just hoping I can intervene on the momma in time.
I could understand the momma eating sand being so used to repti-carpet, but I feel like the sub-adult should have transitions easily.
:-x