- Joined
- Dec 27, 2003
- Messages
- 902
I found this "fat tail" scorp in a petshop here in NJ. I've been studying these for a yr, doing searches on the archnoboards and internet. Thought it was an
A. amourexii which is what I wanted, but think its an A. australis. The guy at the pet store said he thinks its wild caught and they've had it for 1 1/2 yrs.
In that time, he got so he trusted it so well he uses his bare hands to do stuff in the tank which surprised me. He did use tongs when he put it in a delicup, then put it in a second larger one which shows they know a little bit about hot scorpions. He thought it could be gravid because it hasn't been eating very much and getting fatter and fatter. I'm not even sure its a female. I used long tweezers to get her to come to climb the sides of the tank for pictures. It is a very docile calm scorpion. Much more so then I expected from a very hot scorpion. No signs of aggression or fear from her, didn't even run from being in bright light for photos. They told me they have been keeping "her" at room temperature all this time and I should be able to do that too. My question is if its gravid, or getting ready to molt, should I put a heat lamp above the cage (don't have one of those stick on heat mats right now). What I've read is some scorps need cooler temp. periods before they give birth. Guess it would need warmer temps if its going to try to molt. I do think I see a spot of mycosis on one leg in the pictures. I thought scorpion gestation is around 4 to 6 months and this one has been in the pet store for a yr and a half, so it might not be pregnant. Anyone have any guesses? And yes, I do know full well about the danger of having this one in captivity. The tank she is in has several velcro straps all wrapped around the tank and heavy screen top so its much harder to get into. Its on the top shelf of a large bookshelf, out of the way of kids. I also long long tweezers to do any maintainence. Used a large clear bowl to take her out of the tank and she sat still on the table for pictures. She/he's so fat its kinda hard for it to move very fast right now. Just wondering how much longer it will live anyway.
Sharon
A. amourexii which is what I wanted, but think its an A. australis. The guy at the pet store said he thinks its wild caught and they've had it for 1 1/2 yrs.
In that time, he got so he trusted it so well he uses his bare hands to do stuff in the tank which surprised me. He did use tongs when he put it in a delicup, then put it in a second larger one which shows they know a little bit about hot scorpions. He thought it could be gravid because it hasn't been eating very much and getting fatter and fatter. I'm not even sure its a female. I used long tweezers to get her to come to climb the sides of the tank for pictures. It is a very docile calm scorpion. Much more so then I expected from a very hot scorpion. No signs of aggression or fear from her, didn't even run from being in bright light for photos. They told me they have been keeping "her" at room temperature all this time and I should be able to do that too. My question is if its gravid, or getting ready to molt, should I put a heat lamp above the cage (don't have one of those stick on heat mats right now). What I've read is some scorps need cooler temp. periods before they give birth. Guess it would need warmer temps if its going to try to molt. I do think I see a spot of mycosis on one leg in the pictures. I thought scorpion gestation is around 4 to 6 months and this one has been in the pet store for a yr and a half, so it might not be pregnant. Anyone have any guesses? And yes, I do know full well about the danger of having this one in captivity. The tank she is in has several velcro straps all wrapped around the tank and heavy screen top so its much harder to get into. Its on the top shelf of a large bookshelf, out of the way of kids. I also long long tweezers to do any maintainence. Used a large clear bowl to take her out of the tank and she sat still on the table for pictures. She/he's so fat its kinda hard for it to move very fast right now. Just wondering how much longer it will live anyway.
Sharon