Hardened fangs

omarahmedbya

Arachnopeon
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Nov 18, 2024
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My A. Geniculata moulted last Tuesday morning, is it ok to feed it now or are its fangs not strong enough?

Many thanks in advance.
 

Arachnophobphile

Arachnoprince
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What size is your genic in diagonal leg span measurement?

Bigger than sling size is when the fangs turn black it's safe to feed.
 

omarahmedbya

Arachnopeon
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Nov 18, 2024
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I got it when it was juvenile, then it moulted last Tuesday. Issue is, I can’t see its fangs as it’s in the hide, but it did come out to investigate when I teased it with the tweezers (just outside its hide).
 

Arachnophobphile

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It should eventually come out to hunt for prey.

If it never comes out to where you can inspect the fangs or just in a spot you can't see wait until Wednesday or Thursday.

Your genic will not starve if holding off feeding if you wait two weeks after a molt
 

TenebrisAvicularia

Arachnopeon
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So I just found out that it crawled out its hide and is now sitting at the top of it.
A soft exoskeleton usually has a whitish or translucent look to it. You can also check the fangs if possible, white or red fangs mean that they still need hardening. Black fangs are ready to go.

They lose weight in the abdomen after a molt, that's normal. It'll just need some extra feeding when ready.
I'd give the T a few extra days of no feedings just to make sure. It will be fine, just keep the water dish full for hydration.
 

omarahmedbya

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A soft exoskeleton usually has a whitish or translucent look to it. You can also check the fangs if possible, white or red fangs mean that they still need hardening. Black fangs are ready to go.

They lose weight in the abdomen after a molt, that's normal. It'll just need some extra feeding when ready.
I'd give the T a few extra days of no feedings just to make sure. It will be fine, just keep the water dish full for hydration.
Ok, great. Also, is there a way to tell the male and the female apart other than by way of the moult?
 

TenebrisAvicularia

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Ok, great. Also, is there a way to tell the male and the female apart other than by way of the moult?
Ventral sexing is not always 100% accurate, but it can help. For that, you can take a look at the underside of the tarantula's abdomen.
Males tend to have a dark patch of epiandrous fusillae just above the epigastric furrow (between the first pair of book lungs.)
Females may have a more noticeable furrow, it almost looks a bit open or 'fleshy'.

You can get a pic of your T's underside and post it to the Epiandrous fusillae sexing media page.
 

omarahmedbya

Arachnopeon
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Nov 18, 2024
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6
Ventral sexing is not always 100% accurate, but it can help. For that, you can take a look at the underside of the tarantula's abdomen.
Males tend to have a dark patch of epiandrous fusillae just above the epigastric furrow (between the first pair of book lungs.)
Females may have a more noticeable furrow, it almost looks a bit open or 'fleshy'.

You can get a pic of your T's underside and post it to the Epiandrous fusillae sexing media page.
Since it came out of its hide, this means it’s ready for food, right?
 

TenebrisAvicularia

Arachnopeon
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Since it came out of its hide, this means it’s ready for food, right?
It might be, it might not be. If you can get a look at the T's fangs, you'll be able to tell for certain.
Unfortunately, A. geniculatas prefer keeping their paws on the ground, so you probably don't see its mouth parts often.
You can base the time for the exoskeleton to harden on the spider's size.

Larger tarantulas take longer to harden fully, and you don't want to risk a broken/bent fang by feeding too early.
Since your T is a juvenile, it may take around four or more days to be ready. So it might take prey and be fine.
 

fcat

Arachnoangel
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Wax worms and small horn worms are great first meals if it's been sufficient amount of time and you can't get visual confirmation. It's not necessarily the hardness of the feeder but the side to side thrashing on soft fangs that lead to problems. So make sure it's pre killed. When you do that, you give the T the option to eat if it wishes instead of prematurely stimulating a feeding response on a well known eater.
 

viper69

ArachnoGod
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My A. Geniculata moulted last Tuesday morning, is it ok to feed it now or are its fangs not strong enough?

Many thanks in advance.
What SIZE is it?! Someone asked you size and you provided the subjective term of juvenile- which is as useful as telling us you own a small goat jeez.

You have NO idea what size it is??!!
Good luck!
 
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