amphibian & reptile management. general considerations habitat food regulation

18
AMPHIBIAN & REPTILE MANAGEMENT

Upload: eunice-bryant

Post on 24-Dec-2015

221 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: AMPHIBIAN & REPTILE MANAGEMENT. General Considerations Habitat Food Regulation

AMPHIBIAN & REPTILEMANAGEMENT

Page 2: AMPHIBIAN & REPTILE MANAGEMENT. General Considerations Habitat Food Regulation

General Considerations

HabitatFoodRegulation

Page 3: AMPHIBIAN & REPTILE MANAGEMENT. General Considerations Habitat Food Regulation

Vivarium

soil or peatwater – think fish dechlorinate filter temperature

shelter

Page 4: AMPHIBIAN & REPTILE MANAGEMENT. General Considerations Habitat Food Regulation

FOOD

infusoria – babiesearthwormsblood wormsDrosophilacricketsmice

Page 5: AMPHIBIAN & REPTILE MANAGEMENT. General Considerations Habitat Food Regulation

CITES

Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Florahttp://www.cites.org/

~5000 animal species~28,000 plant species

Page 6: AMPHIBIAN & REPTILE MANAGEMENT. General Considerations Habitat Food Regulation

AMPHIBIANS

smooth, moist, glandular skin most species absorb water through

skin some species breath through skin

must spend part of life in water

world – 4780 speciesU. S. – 230 species

Page 7: AMPHIBIAN & REPTILE MANAGEMENT. General Considerations Habitat Food Regulation

AMPHIBIANS

frogstoadsnewtssalamanderscaecilians

Page 8: AMPHIBIAN & REPTILE MANAGEMENT. General Considerations Habitat Food Regulation

FROGS

spend most or all of life in water

green frog Rana clamitans

Page 9: AMPHIBIAN & REPTILE MANAGEMENT. General Considerations Habitat Food Regulation

FROGS

green tree frog – Hyla cineria

Page 10: AMPHIBIAN & REPTILE MANAGEMENT. General Considerations Habitat Food Regulation

TOADS

develop in waterspend later life on land

American toad – Bufo americanus americanus

Page 11: AMPHIBIAN & REPTILE MANAGEMENT. General Considerations Habitat Food Regulation

NEWTS

spend life in water or marshy areas

Page 12: AMPHIBIAN & REPTILE MANAGEMENT. General Considerations Habitat Food Regulation

red spotted newt – Eastern newt

Notophthalmus viridescens – easy to keep

Page 13: AMPHIBIAN & REPTILE MANAGEMENT. General Considerations Habitat Food Regulation

SALAMANDERS

about 320 species2 to 70 inches in length

Page 14: AMPHIBIAN & REPTILE MANAGEMENT. General Considerations Habitat Food Regulation

fire salamander – easy to keep

Page 15: AMPHIBIAN & REPTILE MANAGEMENT. General Considerations Habitat Food Regulation

axolotl - albino

Page 16: AMPHIBIAN & REPTILE MANAGEMENT. General Considerations Habitat Food Regulation

axolotl - gold

Page 17: AMPHIBIAN & REPTILE MANAGEMENT. General Considerations Habitat Food Regulation

tiger salamander

“terrestrial”

easy to keep

Page 18: AMPHIBIAN & REPTILE MANAGEMENT. General Considerations Habitat Food Regulation

caecilianstropical

live underground

1 inch to 1.5 meters