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What a great idea!!! Saves going through all the habitat bit hoping someone has posted one up.
Im looking for pics of a bearded dragons natural habitat, if anyone has one please add it here!! ![]()
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When i get my Gecko's (early next year hopefully) i would like to give them a natural enviroment (desert type as per wild). If anyone can post up either Corn snake or Royal python natural enviroments i would like to try to make their viv's as natural looking as possible too
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Quote:
"Your Bearded Dragon, Its Habitat and Water" by Rick Catt - Hades Dragons UK ![]()
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________________________________________ ![]() Turbo Power, Baby
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Nice idea for a thread!
This is a post I put up a while back with some photos of desert regions, along with the types of things we were seeing (or not seeing!) Ideas for Desert Vivariums Generally, in the areas which were flat, open sand/dust, you wouldn't find anything living there. In the rockier areas you'd find a lot more - in this area in particular we found a couple of shed snake skins, several hatched gecko eggs, two different types of adult gecko (web footed and another, darker, larger one) and a few agamas. Interestingly the ground in this photo (where the snake skins, eggs, agamas and a couple of geckos were found) was so hard and compacted that we had to use a pickaxe to break it - a spade just wouldn't go through, and there was very little loose sandy material. We did also find both species of gecko on softer, dustier ground (1-2" dust layer over a hard base), but there were still abundant trees, bushes and rocks for shelter (you can see it in the background, flanking a dry riverbed). The agamas were almost exclusively confined to rocky areas with hard ground. ![]() ![]() In general, it seemed that once we got out into sandier desert with fewer rocks, there was very little sign of reptile life (and insects were far fewer), at least on the surface. Out in the dunes we found nothing, suggesting that - in this area at least - the reptiles (and their food) tend to stick to rocky, hard-ground areas and avoid the softer areas of deep sand...
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Did you ever recreate the cracked river bed? I used a clay soil to line the bottom of my hognose viv, I let it dry out befor I added more with the grass, it cracked nicely ![]() ![]() Jay
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Crestie viv http://www.reptileforums.co.uk/habit...viv-build.html Believe nothing, no matter where you read it, or who said it, no matter if I have said it, unless it agrees with your own reason and your own common sense. Buddha. |
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Interesting thread!
Here's a few photos of a Boomslang ( Dispholidus typus ) I saw in South Africa. The snake was found at my parents house on the edge of the Magaliesberg nature reserve. The wall in the background is the outside wall of their kitchen. ![]() ![]() Heres their house ![]() The surounding area is classed as moist savanna and is heaven for birds and arboreal reptiles. Various fruit trees grow in the area like wild figs, jacket plum and amarulas. Also different species of acacia (like the one the snake was in), rhus and iron wood trees. The avarage annual rainfall is 700mm and the avarage max. temp. is 26 C in summer. ![]() ![]() ![]()
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Royals : 0.1 Wild Type 1.1 Pastels 0.1 Bumblebee 1.0 Mojave 1.0 Pinstripe 0.1 Lesser Platinum |
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