1 / 29

REPTILE MANAGEMENT

REPTILE MANAGEMENT. General Considerations. Habitat Food Regulation. Vivarium. sand or soil water – think fish dechlorinate filter temperature shelter. REPTILES. chelonians lizards snakes tuataras crocodiles amphisbaenians – worm lizards. Chelonians. turtles tortoises

Anita
Download Presentation

REPTILE MANAGEMENT

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. REPTILEMANAGEMENT

  2. General Considerations • Habitat • Food • Regulation

  3. Vivarium • sand or soil • water – think fish • dechlorinate • filter • temperature • shelter

  4. REPTILES • chelonians • lizards • snakes • tuataras • crocodiles • amphisbaenians – worm lizards

  5. Chelonians • turtles • tortoises • terrapins

  6. TURTLES • spend most or all of their time in water • leatherback turtle – Dermochelys coriacea • largest turtle, endangered

  7. TORTOISE • spend most or all of their time on land • Aldabra tortoise – Geochelone gigantia • 2nd largest tortoise, CITES protected

  8. TERRAPINS • spend significant time on land and in water

  9. TERRAPINS - Red-Eared Slider • Southern U.S. • omnivorous • 75° F Red-Eared slider – Trachemys scripta elegans

  10. LIZARDS • habitats - desert to marshes • diets - herbivorous, omnivorous, carnivorous, insectivorous • temperature requirements - widely varied • bottom line - do your homework

  11. horned toad (a lizard - really!) Phrynosoma platyrhinos –

  12. SNAKES • habitats - desert to marshes • diets - herbivorous, omnivorous, carnivorous, insectivorous • temperature requirements - widely varied • bottom line - do your homework

  13. SNAKES - smooth green snake • habitat - open areas • diet - insectivorous • non venomous • bright green • yellow or cream belly smooth green snake – Opheodrys vernalis

  14. SNAKES - sand boas • many species • habitat - sandy, semi-arid (for many) • diet - small rodents • non venomous • brown patterns • some have orange • females- 18 inches, 200 gm • males - 15 inches, 70 gm Desert Sand Boa – Eryx miliaris

  15. SNAKE CARE • Research - different snakes have different needs • Vet - find one experienced with snakes • Housing • tight cage • as long as the snake • reduces lung infections

  16. SNAKE CARE • Substrate • sand • wood chips - NOT cedar • absorbent • Water • bowl sunk into substrate • needed for shedding • much of requirement comes from prey

  17. SNAKE CARE • heat • lamp or ceramic heater • gradient 80-95° F • don’t use hot rocks • Accessories • tree branches for climbing snakes • hiding places - flower pots, plantings

  18. SNAKE CARE • activity • diurnal • nocturnal • other • quarantine • food - mice, weekly, diameter of snake

  19. SNAKE CARE • handling • hook - best • tong - harmful to snake • sack • exit can - for dumping snake from sack

  20. SNAKE CARE • temperament • always bad • never bad • inbetween • more anxious when shedding and feeding • other characteristics • musky • constrictors

  21. SNAKE CARE • public health • venomous snakes -don’t • cage must be locked • responsible for bites • Salmonella

  22. SNAKE CARE • breeding • live bearers - boa constrictors, water and garter snakes, and rattlesnakes • & egg layers • cool down - may require several months • incubation • 78-84 ° F • ~ 2 months

  23. SNAKE CARE • sexing • size of snake • length of tail from cloaca • hemipenis • “cloacal pop”

  24. SNAKE CARE • sexing • “cloacal pop”

  25. SNAKE CARE • sexing - copperhead hemipenes

  26. SNAKE CARE • sexing by probing

  27. SNAKE CARE • sexing by probing male female

  28. TUATARAS • habitat - small islands around New Zealand • diet - carnivorous • temperature • ~54° F • 50-80 cm; up to 1 kg • living fossils

  29. AMPHISBAENIANS – worm lizards • Florida worm lizard – Rhineura floridana

More Related