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- Newsgroups: rec.pets.herp
- Path: sparky!uunet!spool.mu.edu!umn.edu!csus.edu!netcom.com!mhall
- From: mhall@netcom.com (Michael Hall)
- Subject: Uromastyx
- Message-ID: <1992Dec22.234052.13734@netcom.com>
- Organization: Netcom Online Communications Services (408-241-9760 login: guest)
- Date: Tue, 22 Dec 1992 23:40:52 GMT
- Lines: 45
-
- Regarding Uromastyx (spiny-tailed agamid), does anyone have suggestions
- for terrarium-mates? I don't have this beasty yet, but I'm thinking
- about setting up a terriarum and then purchasing one or two and possibly
- one or two other species of reptiles or amphibians.
-
- Since I'm an amphibian person, I was really hoping for some sort of
- desert amphibian to toss in with Uromastyx. However, the books
- recommend damp sand/soil for African gray foam-nest building treefrogs
- and spadefoot toads, whereas Uromastyx likes it dry, dry, dry and hot,
- hot, hot. (I live in Palo Alto, in the San Francisco Bay Area, and
- it's usually dry and mild outside and in my apartment, so I should be
- able to give Uromastyx dry and hot conditions in its terrarium.) The
- only other desert amphibian that springs to mind is the Australian
- water-holding frog. Besides, I'd like to have an "authentic"
- terrarium, and I don't think the ranges or habitats of Uromastyx and
- the African gray treefrogs overlap and the others are from completely
- different continents.
-
- If amphibians won't do, then how about some other reptile? The books
- caution that Uromastyx are aggressive towards others of the same species,
- but don't you think that a male and female would be okay in a relatively
- large (55 gallon long) terrarium? How do you tell the difference between
- male and female? What about other species? Would other agamids trigger
- territorial problems? What are some species that can tolerate Uromastyx'
- hellish habitat and overlap in its range (subspecies in northern Africa
- and southwestern Asia)? Leopard geckos were my first thought, but they
- too require moist sand/soil.
-
- How about plants? Cacti and succulents, obviously. But I'd like to
- have plants that are edible (i.e., non-toxic) for Uromastyx but
- unappealing (except in a pinch) for Uromastyx to chomp on. And I'd
- prefer that the plant species come from Uromastyx' natural range.
-
- There will be a heating pad underneath, and spot lights and uv lights
- sunning rocks above, with a fairly deep sand substrate. Most books
- recommend using clay pottery pipes places diagonally to provide burrows,
- but it sounds like Uromastyx simply digs into the sand in its native
- habitat, so couldn't I just let it do its thing?
-
- Thanks for any ideas...
-
- --
- Michael Hall \
- personal account\ I'm an amphibian person dammit, not a reptile person.
- mhall@netcom.com \
-