Opistophthalmus (Burrowing Scorpion) Care

Rik Cuddy

Arachnosquire
Joined
Apr 21, 2017
Messages
103
Hi all,
Been scouring the forums and the internet and I can't find much information by the way of setup and care for this species. Apologies if it is already on here, just can't find it!
Thanks in advance
 

soldierof4cheese

Arachnoknight
Joined
Feb 27, 2017
Messages
209
I have a African Burrowing scorpion
(Opistophthalmus)
and really like them, they are easy to care for and aren't too aggressive, plus their colors and build are really cool..I keep mine around 85 to 90 degrees thru the day using incandescent heat light on a timer that shuts off at night. I feed mine every ten days, I give him or her large crickets, five at a time. I put a small bottle cap for water and use sand with clay mixed in, so when the scorpion digs, its holes wont collapse. Got a few rocks and a piece of slate in the ten gallon tank also. Very easy to care for, i plan on getting another one soon, they are cool scorps.
 

Rik Cuddy

Arachnosquire
Joined
Apr 21, 2017
Messages
103
I have a African Burrowing scorpion
(Opistophthalmus)
and really like them, they are easy to care for and aren't too aggressive, plus their colors and build are really cool..I keep mine around 85 to 90 degrees thru the day using incandescent heat light on a timer that shuts off at night. I feed mine every ten days, I give him or her large crickets, five at a time. I put a small bottle cap for water and use sand with clay mixed in, so when the scorpion digs, its holes wont collapse. Got a few rocks and a piece of slate in the ten gallon tank also. Very easy to care for, i plan on getting another one soon, they are cool scorps.
Thanks for the reply!!
Put my setup together and have about 5-6 inches of Pro rep spider life mixed with pro rep sedge peat and some lucky reptile herp pottery. Cork bark in places on top
http://www.pro-rep.co.uk/portfolio/sedge-peat/
http://www.luckyreptile.com/products/145/en/pid1,8$pid2,33336$pid3,7774741/products.html
http://www.pro-rep.co.uk/portfolio/spider-life/
 
Last edited:

soldierof4cheese

Arachnoknight
Joined
Feb 27, 2017
Messages
209
You want to keep them in a desert environment, very low humidity. Use sand and clay mixture, mix them at about two to one, one part clay and two parts sand, mix damp or wet, then fill your tank and tamp the mixture down tightly and let dry over night or until fully dry.
Add your stones and slate, make a starter hole close to the glass. More than likely the scorp will start his or hers burrow under the slate but will find the starter hole and make quick work of creating a burrow, they make very long hides (burrows) so a ten gallon tank is always nice.
Make sure its a desert setup and not a jungle or damp setup, these scorpions come from a very dry climate, though a little humidity at the bottom of the tank wont hurt.
 

soldierof4cheese

Arachnoknight
Joined
Feb 27, 2017
Messages
209
My book says that they live in a arid grassland environment, composite sand tamped, not communal, low humidity and love to burrow. semi desert/grassland/Savannah type living conditions.
 

Rik Cuddy

Arachnosquire
Joined
Apr 21, 2017
Messages
103
Thanks for taking the time to give me the info. So I phoned the pet shop and it turns out that it's a Austrialian Coastal Burrowing Scorpion (Urodacus novaehollandiae) that they have in stock!
 

Stenodactylus

Arachnosquire
Joined
May 20, 2013
Messages
88
Opistophthalmus, as previously pointed out, prefer a deep substrate with a low humidity. Inside the burrows, however, I like to keep a variance in humidity ranges, so the scorpion can choose. The top substrate should be dry. They like it warm, for sure.

Side note. If you are outside of Australia, it is highly unlikely (though not impossible, I guess) that Urodacus are available. If it is truly them, I would snatch them up as fast as you can. :)
 

Rik Cuddy

Arachnosquire
Joined
Apr 21, 2017
Messages
103
Just came across this old thread....! Defo have a Opistophalmus sp, but still unconfirmed on which one. Have a completely dry setup, only overflow the water dish. Pretty much a pet hole tbh!
 

tdark1

Arachnoknight
Old Timer
Joined
Jul 29, 2002
Messages
213
Just came across this old thread....! Defo have a Opistophalmus sp, but still unconfirmed on which one. Have a completely dry setup, only overflow the water dish. Pretty much a pet hole tbh!
Post a pic and maybe we can help ID here!

Cheers,

Rob
 
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