reptile management. general considerations habitat food regulation

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REPTILE MANAGEMENT

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Page 1: REPTILE MANAGEMENT. General Considerations Habitat Food Regulation

REPTILEMANAGEMENT

Page 2: REPTILE MANAGEMENT. General Considerations Habitat Food Regulation

General Considerations

HabitatFoodRegulation

Page 3: REPTILE MANAGEMENT. General Considerations Habitat Food Regulation

Vivarium

sand or soilwater – think fish dechlorinate filter temperature

shelter

Page 4: REPTILE MANAGEMENT. General Considerations Habitat Food Regulation

REPTILES

chelonians

lizards

snakes

tuataras

crocodiles

amphisbaenians – worm lizards

Page 5: REPTILE MANAGEMENT. General Considerations Habitat Food Regulation

Chelonians

turtlestortoisesterrapins

Page 6: REPTILE MANAGEMENT. General Considerations Habitat Food Regulation

TURTLES

spend most or all of their time in waterleatherback turtle – Dermochelys coriacea largest turtle, endangered

Page 7: REPTILE MANAGEMENT. General Considerations Habitat Food Regulation

TORTOISE

spend most or all of their time on landAldabra tortoise – Geochelone gigantia 2nd largest tortoise, CITES protected

Page 8: REPTILE MANAGEMENT. General Considerations Habitat Food Regulation

TERRAPINS

spend significant time on land and in water

Page 9: REPTILE MANAGEMENT. General Considerations Habitat Food Regulation

TERRAPINS - Red-Eared Slider

Southern U.S.omnivorous75° F

Red-Eared slider – Trachemys scripta elegans

Page 10: REPTILE MANAGEMENT. General Considerations Habitat Food Regulation

LIZARDS

habitats - desert to marshesdiets - herbivorous, omnivorous, carnivorous, insectivoroustemperature requirements - widely varied

bottom line - do your homework

Page 11: REPTILE MANAGEMENT. General Considerations Habitat Food Regulation

horned toad (a lizard - really!)

Phrynosoma platyrhinos –

Page 12: REPTILE MANAGEMENT. General Considerations Habitat Food Regulation

SNAKES

habitats - desert to marshesdiets - herbivorous, omnivorous, carnivorous, insectivoroustemperature requirements - widely varied

bottom line - do your homework

Page 13: REPTILE MANAGEMENT. General Considerations Habitat Food Regulation

SNAKES - smooth green snake

habitat - open areasdiet - insectivorousnon venomousbright green yellow or cream belly

smooth green snake – Opheodrys vernalis

Page 14: REPTILE MANAGEMENT. General Considerations Habitat Food Regulation

SNAKES - sand boas

many specieshabitat - sandy, semi-arid (for many)diet - small rodentsnon venomousbrown patterns

some have orange

females - 18 inches, 200 gm

males - 15 inches, 70 gm

Desert Sand Boa – Eryx miliaris

Page 15: REPTILE MANAGEMENT. General Considerations Habitat Food Regulation

SNAKE CARE

Research - different snakes have different needsVet - find one experienced with snakesHousing tight cage as long as the snake

reduces lung infections

Page 16: REPTILE MANAGEMENT. General Considerations Habitat Food Regulation

SNAKE CARE

Substrate sand wood chips - NOT cedar absorbent

Water bowl sunk into substrate needed for shedding much of requirement comes from prey

Page 17: REPTILE MANAGEMENT. General Considerations Habitat Food Regulation

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

Page 18: REPTILE MANAGEMENT. General Considerations Habitat Food Regulation

SNAKE CARE

activity diurnal nocturnal

other quarantine food - mice, weekly, diameter of

snake

Page 19: REPTILE MANAGEMENT. General Considerations Habitat Food Regulation

SNAKE CARE

handling hook - best tong - harmful to snake sack exit can - for dumping snake from

sack

Page 20: REPTILE MANAGEMENT. General Considerations Habitat Food Regulation

SNAKE CARE

temperament always bad never bad inbetween more anxious when shedding and

feeding

other characteristics musky constrictors

Page 21: REPTILE MANAGEMENT. General Considerations Habitat Food Regulation

SNAKE CARE

public health venomous snakes -don’t cage must be locked responsible for bites

Salmonella

Page 22: REPTILE MANAGEMENT. General Considerations Habitat Food Regulation

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

Page 23: REPTILE MANAGEMENT. General Considerations Habitat Food Regulation

SNAKE CARE

sexing size of snake length of tail from cloaca hemipenis “cloacal pop”

Page 24: REPTILE MANAGEMENT. General Considerations Habitat Food Regulation

SNAKE CARE

sexing “cloacal pop”

Page 25: REPTILE MANAGEMENT. General Considerations Habitat Food Regulation

SNAKE CARE

sexing - copperhead hemipenes

Page 26: REPTILE MANAGEMENT. General Considerations Habitat Food Regulation

SNAKE CARE

sexing by probing

Page 27: REPTILE MANAGEMENT. General Considerations Habitat Food Regulation

SNAKE CARE

sexing by probingmale

female

Page 28: REPTILE MANAGEMENT. General Considerations Habitat Food Regulation

TUATARAS

habitat - small islands around New Zealanddiet - carnivoroustemperature ~54° F

50-80 cm; up to 1 kgliving fossils

Page 29: REPTILE MANAGEMENT. General Considerations Habitat Food Regulation

AMPHISBAENIANS – worm lizards

Florida worm lizard – Rhineura floridana