Yemen laying :)

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Ian

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My lil yemen female has finally come to lay her clutch...shes been in and out of her sand box all day, digging a tunnel.

Here she is covered in sand:

DSCN1733.jpg


And her nest:

karennest.jpg


Hope for her eggs any day soon :D

Cheers,

Ian

 
Did you take the eggs and seperate them? I was going to get a veiled chameleon at one point so I got a book on them. It said that if you took the eggs and placed them in sand spaced apart by about two inches that more chameleons would survive. It said something about a signal so that all the chameleons would hatch at once, whether they were all ready or not, and if they were spaced then they would hatch individually when they were ready and thus, more would survive. Dunno if it is the same for your species but I thought it is interesting nonetheless.

 
well, out last clutch of eggs was infertile, so we did not incubate them. However, I have read that if spaced apart, there is a higher hatch rate. We were also told that using an incubator has proved to be a waste of time. A good method to use, in put the eggs in crickets tubs, filled half with damp vermiculite, and placed on a heat mat. I think we will use this method...as the guy that suggested this has reared yemen chameleons for years ;)

Veiled and yemen chameleon are the same, they are both the chamaeleo Calyptratus.

Cheers,

Ian

 
Oh, well I thought when you said yemen you were refereing to a scientific name so it didn't click. I was wondering why that mantis looked familiar. :D You said you would be putting the eggs in tubes, will they still be spaced? Anyway, good luck with your new clutch. By the way, how many eggs do you have. I know the species can lay up to 80.

 
okay, she finally laid them :D

After diggin about 6 different tunnels, and filling them all back in, she finally picked a good spot in the corner.

Got 43 off of her all, and just putting them in for incubation.

Here they are:

karenegg12.jpg


kaernegg1.jpg


Now the long wait for them to hatch...

Cheers,

Ian

 
is there a good hatch rate or are a lot of em unlikely to hatch?

 
With fertile eggs from a well cared for, healthy female, you can expect nearly 100% to hatch.

 

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