Hi all!
I recently got an amblypygid from my local reptile shop. This is my first invert (with the exception of some poorly-cared-for hermit crabs as a child), so I've doing as much research as I can, but I'm finding that information beyond the basics is rather sparse.
Currently, it's approximately 4-6 months old and housed in a small Zilla arboreal micro habitat, with soil and sphagnum moss as substrate and several pieces of cork bark. The shop-owners recommended keeping it in there until it's grown a bit, so it doesn't have trouble hunting. Once it outgrows that, I want to move it into a bioactive terrarium, so I don't have to clean as much and to offer as natural a habitat as possible. However, I'm not finding many examples online of others who have done bioactive enclosures for amblypygi. I know to have a drainage layer, some sort of screen, then substrate. I plan to add sphagnum moss to keep the humidity up, plus leaf-litter for the isopods. I'll have a climbable backdrop, plus plenty of corkbark. At the reptile shop, they recommended setting up the vivarium and letting the isopods and springtails establish before introducing the amblypygid.
Some questions I have:
What size terrarium is appropriate for an adult amblypygid? Would 8x10x15 inches work? I've seen conflicting information, with some saying that it should be at least twice its legspan in every direction, and others saying that non-vertical space is wasted.
Should I go straight from a small terrarium to the full-size one, or would it be better to have an intermediate enclosure between the two?
Are there any particular isopods that would be best, or are they all more or less the same?
Which plants would do best? I'm considering pothos, since it does well in low light and high humidity.
Is a bioactive terrarium too ambitious for a first-time keeper?
Any other advice on bioactive enclosures or properly housing an amblypygid is very welcome. I'm new to all of this, so I appreciate your expertise!
I recently got an amblypygid from my local reptile shop. This is my first invert (with the exception of some poorly-cared-for hermit crabs as a child), so I've doing as much research as I can, but I'm finding that information beyond the basics is rather sparse.
Currently, it's approximately 4-6 months old and housed in a small Zilla arboreal micro habitat, with soil and sphagnum moss as substrate and several pieces of cork bark. The shop-owners recommended keeping it in there until it's grown a bit, so it doesn't have trouble hunting. Once it outgrows that, I want to move it into a bioactive terrarium, so I don't have to clean as much and to offer as natural a habitat as possible. However, I'm not finding many examples online of others who have done bioactive enclosures for amblypygi. I know to have a drainage layer, some sort of screen, then substrate. I plan to add sphagnum moss to keep the humidity up, plus leaf-litter for the isopods. I'll have a climbable backdrop, plus plenty of corkbark. At the reptile shop, they recommended setting up the vivarium and letting the isopods and springtails establish before introducing the amblypygid.
Some questions I have:
What size terrarium is appropriate for an adult amblypygid? Would 8x10x15 inches work? I've seen conflicting information, with some saying that it should be at least twice its legspan in every direction, and others saying that non-vertical space is wasted.
Should I go straight from a small terrarium to the full-size one, or would it be better to have an intermediate enclosure between the two?
Are there any particular isopods that would be best, or are they all more or less the same?
Which plants would do best? I'm considering pothos, since it does well in low light and high humidity.
Is a bioactive terrarium too ambitious for a first-time keeper?
Any other advice on bioactive enclosures or properly housing an amblypygid is very welcome. I'm new to all of this, so I appreciate your expertise!
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