joossa
Arachnobaron
- Joined
- Nov 21, 2020
- Messages
- 333
I was gifted a female E. murinus for my birthday a few days ago. (I did not know this was going to be given to me.) She came with her enclosure. I’ve done some research the last few days and am concerned about a few things and have questions, mainly about the setup. From what I read, it is best to keep this species like an Asian fossorial: lots of depth and sub to burrow in, moderate ventilation, and moist sub at all times.
It looks like she is set up in a less than ideal manner. She’s in a plastic 15in(L) x 10in(W) x 6.5in(H) Sterilite container…pretty large. Tons of floor space, but with a height of 6in and at the deepest, currently has about 4in of substrate. The sub is a mix of 75% pure peat and 25% sand.
According to the person that gifted her to me, she has always been pretty docile and not skittish and has not been a burrower (despite her having a starter burrow in her current enclosure).
She hangs out in the open and has webbed almost the entire surface of the substrate going up to the lid. I have read that if kept this way (more terrestrially), the T could be more defensive and prone to panic and bolt out of the enclosure when it’s opened since it does not have a burrow to retreat to.
So, some questions…
1) Is this enclosure acceptable for the T or does it need something deeper? How’s the ventilation?
2) If the enclosure is acceptable, why is the T not burrowing at all? Could this individual just like staying out of in the open (in know it’s unlikely, but had to ask)?
3) Would this T be okay if daytime temps in the rooms she’s in got to 85F or so for several hours of the day?
4) I only have experience with “easy” NW terrestrials that are kept on dry soil, mainly Brachypelma, and am not sure if this T is right for me. With that being said:
a) It seems the defensiveness of this T can be all over the place based on what I read. I also read they can be really fast. Would you consider this a good intermediate species in terms of difficulty or this this more of an advanced level species?
b) How do you all prevent fungus/mold in an enclosure that requires constantly moist sub?
c) If fungus or mold does occur, how do you deal with it considering the T depends on moist conditions? Mold and fungus is something I have like no experience with since I keep all my other Ts bone dry.
Worst case, she was given to me by a family member and I could potentially return her if she does not end up being a good fit for me. The person that gave her to me thought it would be a good step up from my current Ts in order to gain more experience with faster and more moisture dependent Ts. She is a beautiful T, but I tend to be a worry wart.

It looks like she is set up in a less than ideal manner. She’s in a plastic 15in(L) x 10in(W) x 6.5in(H) Sterilite container…pretty large. Tons of floor space, but with a height of 6in and at the deepest, currently has about 4in of substrate. The sub is a mix of 75% pure peat and 25% sand.
According to the person that gifted her to me, she has always been pretty docile and not skittish and has not been a burrower (despite her having a starter burrow in her current enclosure).
She hangs out in the open and has webbed almost the entire surface of the substrate going up to the lid. I have read that if kept this way (more terrestrially), the T could be more defensive and prone to panic and bolt out of the enclosure when it’s opened since it does not have a burrow to retreat to.
So, some questions…
1) Is this enclosure acceptable for the T or does it need something deeper? How’s the ventilation?
2) If the enclosure is acceptable, why is the T not burrowing at all? Could this individual just like staying out of in the open (in know it’s unlikely, but had to ask)?
3) Would this T be okay if daytime temps in the rooms she’s in got to 85F or so for several hours of the day?
4) I only have experience with “easy” NW terrestrials that are kept on dry soil, mainly Brachypelma, and am not sure if this T is right for me. With that being said:
a) It seems the defensiveness of this T can be all over the place based on what I read. I also read they can be really fast. Would you consider this a good intermediate species in terms of difficulty or this this more of an advanced level species?
b) How do you all prevent fungus/mold in an enclosure that requires constantly moist sub?
c) If fungus or mold does occur, how do you deal with it considering the T depends on moist conditions? Mold and fungus is something I have like no experience with since I keep all my other Ts bone dry.
Worst case, she was given to me by a family member and I could potentially return her if she does not end up being a good fit for me. The person that gave her to me thought it would be a good step up from my current Ts in order to gain more experience with faster and more moisture dependent Ts. She is a beautiful T, but I tend to be a worry wart.





