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Mantid Discussions
Health Issues
Sick Malaysian Dead Leaf
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<blockquote data-quote="Synapze" data-source="post: 326662" data-attributes="member: 10818"><p>D. lobata require consistent high humidity (70-80) and good ventilation... a hard to maintain combo. Temps should be maintained above 74° to thrive and molt successfully. Consistent low temperatures can prevent digestion of food and a fat abdomen can interfere with molting. You should consider buying a temperature/humidity meter; I wouldn't consider it optional... it's hard to guestimate when it comes to many exotic species. </p><p></p><p>I would boost the temperature of her enclosure to around 80° and add more ventilation. I would look and not touch for a few days and see what happens. Best wishes... keep us posted. <img class="smilie smilie--emoji" loading="lazy" alt="☺️" title="Smiling face :relaxed:" src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/joypixels/assets/8.0/png/unicode/64/263a.png" data-shortname=":relaxed:" /></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Synapze, post: 326662, member: 10818"] D. lobata require consistent high humidity (70-80) and good ventilation... a hard to maintain combo. Temps should be maintained above 74° to thrive and molt successfully. Consistent low temperatures can prevent digestion of food and a fat abdomen can interfere with molting. You should consider buying a temperature/humidity meter; I wouldn't consider it optional... it's hard to guestimate when it comes to many exotic species. I would boost the temperature of her enclosure to around 80° and add more ventilation. I would look and not touch for a few days and see what happens. Best wishes... keep us posted. ☺️ [/QUOTE]
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Mantid Discussions
Health Issues
Sick Malaysian Dead Leaf
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