I guess it was bound to happen
I have mites.:rage: I have been keeping pythons for over 20 years and this is the first time I have ever had mites. To be honest I have no idea where they came from. I haven't added any snakes in a few months and my last pickup was quarantined for a month with no problems in a different room. How long is their life cycle? I walked through a local reptile rescue's display on a visit to a museum about a month ago. Didn't handle any snakes but that is about the only thing I can think of. I have already ordered Provent A Mite. Does anyone know if it can be used in tubs with gravid females? I have two females that will be laying in the next week and a few more later this month.
Re: I guess it was bound to happen
If I'm correct their life cycle isn't very long, but once they're there they breed like crazy and the eggs can last for quite some time until conditions are good enough for them to hatch.
As for PAM with gravid females... I don't see how it could hurt, but I've never tried it so you might want a second opinion on it.
Re: I guess it was bound to happen
It shouldn't cause any issues. Just be sure to use as directed!
Re: I guess it was bound to happen
Nix is the best thing you can use. You mix the whole bottle with a gallon of distilled water, place the snake in a tub with some of the mixed water, and while the snake is soaking spray down the whole cage, wait about 15min, then clean out the whole cage and wash with soap and water, then place everything back in the cage spary down with Nix again and remove your snake from the tub wipe down the snake and spary the snake again and place in cage. I learned this trick from my brother as he works for a breeder out of a huge warehouse and thats what they use. The thing is with the other products that kill mites they do not kill the eggs, so in a weeks time you could have mites again. With the Nix it kills mites, and eggs, works like a charm, and it does not harm the snake at all. Read up on it alot of breeders use NIX. I had to do this last week as my Alibo Ball got mites I have no idea how as he is the only snake I have but he did and the NIX worked great.
Re: I guess it was bound to happen
Mites don't just hide on the snake and its enclosure. They can and will lay eggs in random places in your house. The simplest thing to do is just use PAM on the enclosure. You don't need to do all of that extravagant mess with Nix or anything else.
- Take snake and water out.
- Spray PAM per instructions on can.
- The mites on the snake will die in a couple of days just from the snake being in the PAM'd enclosure.
- Reapply in 10-15 days to kill off baby mites that will have hatched.
That pretty much ends the cycle, as the babies will not have reproduced yet. Some people reapply every month as preventative maintenance.
Re: I guess it was bound to happen
Quote:
Originally Posted by
spitzu
Mites don't just hide on the snake and its enclosure. They can and will lay eggs in random places in your house. The simplest thing to do is just use PAM on the enclosure. You don't need to do all of that extravagant mess with Nix or anything else.
- Take snake and water out.
- Spray PAM per instructions on can.
- The mites on the snake will die in a couple of days just from the snake being in the PAM'd enclosure.
- Reapply in 10-15 days to kill off baby mites that will have hatched.
That pretty much ends the cycle, as the babies will not have reproduced yet. Some people reapply every month as preventative maintenance.
:gj:
AlbinoBall: PAM does indeed kill mites and their eggs and will continue to do so for up to 30 days. PAM is the only mite treatment that is approved for use with reptiles. If you read this PAM link, it will tell you all you need to know. I personally don't care what breeder uses Nix... I would never put that stuff anywhere near my snakes. It's just too easy to make a mistake and it's for the use of killing head lice on human beings, not for mites on snakes. PAM is the way to go.
To the OP: I do overkill when treating my tanks for mites. Even though it's probably unnecessary, I take out his hides and water bowl and I soak them in a bleach/water solution (like one capful of bleach to a kitchen sink full of water), rinse them very well and then I bake them in the oven at 200* for a few hours. I did this with my BP in addition to using PAM and one treatment of PAM was all it took. I followed the same procedure with my RTB and hopefully, I'll only have to do it one time with him, too.
Good luck in getting rid of those evil little things! :)