- Joined
- Feb 22, 2013
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- 3,292
Well, that didn't go smoothly.
The male was introduced, and within ten minutes began tapping. She ignored him for awhile before beginning to tap herself. Great! I can see the Nhandu babies already. Well, not so much. Once their legs touched, she was on him in an instant. I was luckily able to separate them (but not before getting haired myself), and at first I was discouraged. A drop of clear fluid on the base of his leg told me that he got tagged, so I set him up in a humid, dark room and hoped for the best. As of this morning, he's perfectly fine insofar as he took the time overnight to make another sperm web. So I lucked out on that - perhaps that clear fluid was just her venom.
We're going to try this again in a neutral enclosure in a few days. I'll sprinkle her substrate in that enclosure just to get the pheromones going so that he'll continue to tap. Here's to fingers crossed.
Any advice or tips on breeding aggressive females is wholly welcome!
The male was introduced, and within ten minutes began tapping. She ignored him for awhile before beginning to tap herself. Great! I can see the Nhandu babies already. Well, not so much. Once their legs touched, she was on him in an instant. I was luckily able to separate them (but not before getting haired myself), and at first I was discouraged. A drop of clear fluid on the base of his leg told me that he got tagged, so I set him up in a humid, dark room and hoped for the best. As of this morning, he's perfectly fine insofar as he took the time overnight to make another sperm web. So I lucked out on that - perhaps that clear fluid was just her venom.
We're going to try this again in a neutral enclosure in a few days. I'll sprinkle her substrate in that enclosure just to get the pheromones going so that he'll continue to tap. Here's to fingers crossed.
Any advice or tips on breeding aggressive females is wholly welcome!