- Joined
- Jan 3, 2019
- Messages
- 1,208
I wouldn't feed them. Dwarf whites are parthenogenic and the population will grow to match the available food source. Miss a few meal times and that enhanced population might start looking at your T as the next meal. If you only have one starter culture added (10-25 ct) just make sure they have enough leaf litter to survive and they shouldn't pose a threat to a larger 4"± tarantula. I've kept dwarf whites with my regalis, metallica, and P. pulcher for years with no issue and plan on having them in every adult T enclosure. By not supplemental feeding them and occasionally drying the enclosure down, the population stays just where I want it to be to clean up bolus and excrement.If the whole point of getting rid of the isopods is that there is a chance they may harm your T, and digging your T out means that there is a chance that you may harm your T, then to me that seems not like a solution to your problem- seems like you're back at square one of the issue, which is trying to avoid possible harm to your pet.
I would agree with Frogdaddy, dwarf whites are a species that's not as likely to harm your T than other ones you could've put in. I would also imagine if you recently added them there might not be that many, like the enclosure probably isn't loaded with then. What I would do is provide the isopods with food that has a source of protein until your T comes out - if they have a good source of protein right in front of them that they don't have to work for, they will be far less likely to try and munch on your T, which as stated this species already has a pretty low (but not zero) probability of that happening anyway