PhilinYuma
Well-known member
I guess that I should put on record the fact that I am now wintering two ooths out of doors, in close proximity. One, laid last night on a piece of sponge, will be exposed to the normal photoperiod plus incandescent light, a 60 W flood at a range of two feet from before dusk until midnight, and the other, laid on a twig (how considerate!) on Nov 1, exposed to the natural photoperiod only.
I have tried, so far as know how, to make the two setups identical. In my cages, I keep a shotglass full of sand planted with dry grass and a single verticle twig. The Nov 1st ooth was laid on that, and I have cut off most of the sponge from the second ooth and mounted it on a twig, "tail down" with tacky glue (not the usual cyanocrylate which, though often recommended, is pretty toxic stuff).
Such an amateurish setup is very far from bulletproof. I shall have to ensure that the floodlight does not unduly raise the temperature in the vincinity of the first ooth and that it does not cause an abnormally low humidity.
Since desiccation could prevent hatching, and since the humidity is a not supposed to be a variable in this experiment, I shall keep the sand in each shotglass moist even though that will create a micro climate that differs from the surrounding air. The thrd ooth, laid on October 6th will be raised indoors.
One interesting experimental advantage shared by the two outside ooths is that they were laid by the same female within a couple of days of each other, so if they hatch at substantially different times, that too will be worth consideration.
I shall post on this again, if and when I get a hatch or if some disaster strikes, but if anyone can come up with any "doable" way of improving the experiment, I should like to hear from you ASAP.
If anyone else can duplicate the experiment, we will have more data.
I have tried, so far as know how, to make the two setups identical. In my cages, I keep a shotglass full of sand planted with dry grass and a single verticle twig. The Nov 1st ooth was laid on that, and I have cut off most of the sponge from the second ooth and mounted it on a twig, "tail down" with tacky glue (not the usual cyanocrylate which, though often recommended, is pretty toxic stuff).
Such an amateurish setup is very far from bulletproof. I shall have to ensure that the floodlight does not unduly raise the temperature in the vincinity of the first ooth and that it does not cause an abnormally low humidity.
Since desiccation could prevent hatching, and since the humidity is a not supposed to be a variable in this experiment, I shall keep the sand in each shotglass moist even though that will create a micro climate that differs from the surrounding air. The thrd ooth, laid on October 6th will be raised indoors.
One interesting experimental advantage shared by the two outside ooths is that they were laid by the same female within a couple of days of each other, so if they hatch at substantially different times, that too will be worth consideration.
I shall post on this again, if and when I get a hatch or if some disaster strikes, but if anyone can come up with any "doable" way of improving the experiment, I should like to hear from you ASAP.
If anyone else can duplicate the experiment, we will have more data.
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