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Terrarium for Taricha granulosa(Newt). Work in progress

Posted: 2011-01-30 11:10pm
by Alyrium Denryle
Bit of background:
I have been trying to get my grubby mits on T. granulosa for years. The part of TX I live in has very little in terms of specialized herp stores or anything like that. In fact, there is nothing, and amphibians get short shrift in the shows that come through. As a result, I have to order. Now, last year, I ordered a pair, but ended up getting a pair of Paramesotriton chinensis instead. Apparantly the supplier for the place I ordered from was U.S. Global Exotics... so that explains why there was a bad ID, and why they arrived in such poor condition. I managed to save one, and fell in love with her (so to speak). So, not so bad. Still, wrong species.

Well, I have tried again. No idea what sex (not that I care), but the Newt gets here on Tuesday.

What I have planned is a fully living Paludarium. Complete with in-tank invert cultures. Copepods and the like.

Here are the photos of what I have done so far. I need to wait a while for the aquarium sealant to cure.

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I have a decorative Reptofilter in the back, and the tank divider is raised a little bit above the floor of the tank. This will allow the filter to draw water from the aquatic section through the terrestrial section. The substrate I am using has a pre-established colony of nitrifying bacteria, and I use all live plants.

Update:

OK. I have step two done. The construction of the stream bed. The reptofilter is less of a waterfall in this case, and more like a natural spring. The stream itself will contain pebbles and small aquatic plants/moss. And yes, that is a butchered piece of rain gutter.

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Re: Terrarium for Taricha granulosa(Newt). Work in progress

Posted: 2011-02-16 10:06pm
by Slacker
I'm intrigued by the idea of self-contained invert cultures, as I have a large community fish tank and it'd save me buying the damn frozen cubes all the time. That said, the copepods you're aiming for are a bit smaller than the mysis shrimp I'd like to get a supply of. They're much heathier for fish than brine shrimp, from everything I've read, but there's no way I've found to culture them.