freddierossero
Arachnopeon
- Joined
- Sep 20, 2014
- Messages
- 4
hi everyone. i've been having a lot of my slings die in the past few months, so i was wondering if you could help me figure out what's going on.
about a year ago, i got 5 Ts shipped to me: 1 A. chalcodes, 1 C. cyaneopubescens, 1 Euathlus sp. red, 1 P. murinus (a freebie), and 1 H. sp. Colombia (also a freebie). i unpacked them and put them in their enclosures--for the slings, the terrestrial sling kit from jamie's tarantulas, the juvenile kit for the GBB, and a critter keeper for the ~3" A. chalcodes. about a week later, the pumpkin patch died. i was sad, but i figured it was just a bad molt, and that these things happen. the rest were okay for a while, and then i ended up being hospitalized for a month and a half, with no one to take care of my Ts. i came home expecting them to pretty much all be dead, but none of them were. the P. murinus had a piece of bark in its cage that was moldy, and that's what i assume caused its death, which happened not too long after i got back.
then this spring, i ordered 5 more slings, and got 1 freebie-- 2 A. eutylenum, 1 G. pulchripes, 1 P. scrofa, 1 A. geniculata, and the free N. chromatus. all through the spring and summer, they were all ok. i ended up moving, and the spiders moved with me, staying in my closet until we unpacked and settled in. i think this is when i started to see some jerky movements from one or two of the slings, and was concerned that maybe something in the closet was causing dks. i cleaned out anything chemical-y, and checked on the spiders i could see (a couple would stay burrowed for weeks or months at a time). i went away for a week or so, and when i came back, things had gotten worse. by august, 3 of my spiders had died--1 A. eutylenum, the P. scrofa, and the A. geniculata, all within about a week of each other. the G. pulchripes had been burrowed for a long time, so i'm not sure when it died, but rest assured that it did. again, in some of them i had seen the uncoordinated/jerky movements, and some seemed like they had bad molts. i moved the spiders all out to a separate building, where we keep our snakes.
in september, my GBB died, which was really upsetting since i'd had it for almost a year, and it had grown quite a bit. it looked like a bad molt, potentially from me not keeping up on its water enough. since then, i've been checking their moisture/water daily, and generally spraying the sides of their enclosures and wetting the substrate a little every other day. i did have to bring them back into the closet for about a week and a half because we were doing some construction in that separate building. up until about a week ago, everything seemed fine--they were back in the separate building, eating pretty well, seeming fine. i switched the E. sp. red to a different substrate, coco coir mixed with moss, to help prevent some mold issues. it seemed like it was having some trouble adjusting to the more varied surface at first, but then its movements got worse, and are now jerky and uncoordinated like dks might be the problem. a little before this got worse, i noticed that the (smaller) A. eutylenum was starting to move strangely, too.
this morning i went out to check on them, and those two are still moving with difficulty, and i think the N. chromatus is dead--it's hard to say if it was moving strangely, since it's almost always burrowed. i looked through the bottom of its enclosure to where the tunnels are visible, and it doesn't look good. the A. chalcodes still seems to be fine.
so after all that, my question is: is this my fault? is it a case of improper husbandry, or just the fact that spiders have a lot of babies at once, most of which don't survive? it seems to me that seven spiders dying in a year or less is a lot, even if they were all slings, especially knowing that three more may be dying or dead soon.
they're all kept in pretty small containers, and i'm good about cleaning up their pre-killed crickets after a couple of days. a couple of them had some mold issues with the bark i was using as hides, so i took that out of all the enclosures--now they just have their tunnels and/or some fake plants. like i said, i spray water droplets on them about every other day, especially now that we're heating the snake room and it's getting pretty dry in there.
sorry for the super long post, and thanks in advance!!!!
about a year ago, i got 5 Ts shipped to me: 1 A. chalcodes, 1 C. cyaneopubescens, 1 Euathlus sp. red, 1 P. murinus (a freebie), and 1 H. sp. Colombia (also a freebie). i unpacked them and put them in their enclosures--for the slings, the terrestrial sling kit from jamie's tarantulas, the juvenile kit for the GBB, and a critter keeper for the ~3" A. chalcodes. about a week later, the pumpkin patch died. i was sad, but i figured it was just a bad molt, and that these things happen. the rest were okay for a while, and then i ended up being hospitalized for a month and a half, with no one to take care of my Ts. i came home expecting them to pretty much all be dead, but none of them were. the P. murinus had a piece of bark in its cage that was moldy, and that's what i assume caused its death, which happened not too long after i got back.
then this spring, i ordered 5 more slings, and got 1 freebie-- 2 A. eutylenum, 1 G. pulchripes, 1 P. scrofa, 1 A. geniculata, and the free N. chromatus. all through the spring and summer, they were all ok. i ended up moving, and the spiders moved with me, staying in my closet until we unpacked and settled in. i think this is when i started to see some jerky movements from one or two of the slings, and was concerned that maybe something in the closet was causing dks. i cleaned out anything chemical-y, and checked on the spiders i could see (a couple would stay burrowed for weeks or months at a time). i went away for a week or so, and when i came back, things had gotten worse. by august, 3 of my spiders had died--1 A. eutylenum, the P. scrofa, and the A. geniculata, all within about a week of each other. the G. pulchripes had been burrowed for a long time, so i'm not sure when it died, but rest assured that it did. again, in some of them i had seen the uncoordinated/jerky movements, and some seemed like they had bad molts. i moved the spiders all out to a separate building, where we keep our snakes.
in september, my GBB died, which was really upsetting since i'd had it for almost a year, and it had grown quite a bit. it looked like a bad molt, potentially from me not keeping up on its water enough. since then, i've been checking their moisture/water daily, and generally spraying the sides of their enclosures and wetting the substrate a little every other day. i did have to bring them back into the closet for about a week and a half because we were doing some construction in that separate building. up until about a week ago, everything seemed fine--they were back in the separate building, eating pretty well, seeming fine. i switched the E. sp. red to a different substrate, coco coir mixed with moss, to help prevent some mold issues. it seemed like it was having some trouble adjusting to the more varied surface at first, but then its movements got worse, and are now jerky and uncoordinated like dks might be the problem. a little before this got worse, i noticed that the (smaller) A. eutylenum was starting to move strangely, too.
this morning i went out to check on them, and those two are still moving with difficulty, and i think the N. chromatus is dead--it's hard to say if it was moving strangely, since it's almost always burrowed. i looked through the bottom of its enclosure to where the tunnels are visible, and it doesn't look good. the A. chalcodes still seems to be fine.
so after all that, my question is: is this my fault? is it a case of improper husbandry, or just the fact that spiders have a lot of babies at once, most of which don't survive? it seems to me that seven spiders dying in a year or less is a lot, even if they were all slings, especially knowing that three more may be dying or dead soon.
they're all kept in pretty small containers, and i'm good about cleaning up their pre-killed crickets after a couple of days. a couple of them had some mold issues with the bark i was using as hides, so i took that out of all the enclosures--now they just have their tunnels and/or some fake plants. like i said, i spray water droplets on them about every other day, especially now that we're heating the snake room and it's getting pretty dry in there.
sorry for the super long post, and thanks in advance!!!!