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Having Temp Trouble

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  • 10-26-2012, 12:57 PM
    AdamF
    Re: Having Temp Trouble
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by kitedemon View Post
    My snake room is this morning is 66ºF I have insulated enclosures (energy efficient ones too) The ambients are all in the 80ºs insulation in my experience is good for 3-7º depending. I don't like blankets but instead rigid pink or blue insulation it is easy to cut and deal with and the thiner stuff is also not super expensive. Too bad about the night drop it can be used to counter the night temps. It sounds like a bulb or some sort will be needed I would suggest side turning the tank if you have the money for a bit of plexi for the door (about 25-50$ depending) It holds heat and humidity like a PVC enclosure. Ambient temps may be heated with a fluorescent bulb in the day and deep blue LED in the night.

    http://ball-pythons.net/forums/showt...arium-Solution

    If this is not possible I'd suggest a bulb. I would use a deep blue bulb as snakes in general and specifically royal pythons see visually from the mid 500nm to 800+nm red being 660-800 red is what they see the best. The centre of our spectrum is yellow so the idea is a yellow light (tungsten light bulb) is loosely how a snake sees deep red. When you add trigeminal nerve and het pits to the equation they clearly see deep reds and infrared and the animal is tuned for this end of the spectrum. The eye of pythons has a yellow coating (part of the spectacle scale) that blocks UV and blue light. I would use blue as they have very low visual acuity to blues.



    This is completely incorrect. Geckos sure snakes not at all. Snakes are tuned for red blue is a visual neutral colour. Many have commented on snakes tracking the point of a red laser from a IR gun.
    http://ball-pythons.net/forums/showt...t=follow+laser




    Any night bulb, red, black etc will work. This is CORRECT. The laser light is completely different that incandescent. This is one reason humans can stare at a red reptile bulb for some time, but will suffer serious eye damage from only a few seconds of direct laser light. Snake pits can "feel" infrared heat with their pits, but their ability to see this color with their eyes, is minimal if at all. I am of course talking about the night reptile bulbs, and not a red Xmas Tree light. If you want to start messing around with R ratings and insulation, i'm sure you can rig up something, but think about all you must to when you need to wash out the tank. Much to move, and it if the snake is in a living area, as opposed to a snake room, it will be quite the eyesore. In addition, florescent lights give off minimal heat, and are not used to generate heat. Some of the posts above are anecdotal from hobbyists, and not scientific.


    http://www.nature.com/news/2010/1003....2010.122.html


    http://exoticpets.about.com/cs/pytho...lpythons_2.htm
  • 10-26-2012, 02:05 PM
    barbie.dragon
    Ok I suffered the same problem as you and it's pretty much solved. My room gets to around 65 at night and warms up kind of during the day. What I ended up doing was wrapping the sides and back with a blanket as a quick solution. It kept my temperatures much more stable. I suspend my lamp a little closer to the cool side and it is on 24/7. I have a 20 gallon long and the lamp is a black light 75 watt. It came with a dimmer so I adjust accordingly but most of the time it's at full power all the time. You might want to get a more accurate thermostat? That might be a "problem". I keep my hotside 87 degrees and in conjunction of the heat lamp it pretty much stays that way, but I see my thermostat really working at it to keep it like that. ALSO I would get a temperature gun. I got mine on wednesday and I have no idea what I would do without it. And cover the screen top (at least 65% of the top as hot air rises and the screen doesn't really stop the heat from escaping.

    If you're handy take a look at this: http://ball-pythons.net/forums/showt...nsulating+tank

    As a long term solution (which is what I am doing) Get some foam boards (or actual insulation which is what I'm doing), glue on some aquarium background and glue that onto the sides of the tank. pretty insulation! DIY: http://ball-pythons.net/forums/showt...ium+background

    TL;DR: Wrap your tank in a blankie to keep the temperatures more stable. Cover at least 65% of the screen top. Keep the humidity at 50%+, as water in the air helps keep temperatures more stable as well. And take a look at both links. Hope you have as much success as I do!
  • 10-26-2012, 02:44 PM
    kitedemon
    Once again this is really funny and totally incorrect. The eye of Royals has very few cones mostly only rods these are middle wave photo receptors. The simply do not see blues at all. The eye structure is likely only dichromate and likely yellow reds based on the spectral response of the two cone pigments. The sensitivity is mostly on the long end of the spectrum not the short. Red is long wave. So red yes blue no. Clearly you have very little understanding of the animal "feel" IR really?

    In pythons that have heat pit membrane is populated by the trigeminal nerve masses. This nerve carries signals are relayed to the optic tectum this processes the IR information and integrated with the optical information from the eye and the best guess is overlaid. If it can be separated and concentrated singly or not is open to debate. But they MOST certainly do not feel heat with the heat pits the 'see' heat. Not that this changes the response of the two cone pigments.

    If you are going to make blanket statements make sure they are correct.

    http://www.mapoflife.org/topics/topi...ion-in-snakes/
    http://jeb.biologists.org/content/202/14/1931.full.pdf
  • 10-26-2012, 04:03 PM
    AdamF
    Re: Having Temp Trouble
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by kitedemon View Post
    Once again this is really funny and totally incorrect. The eye of Royals has very few cones mostly only rods these are middle wave photo receptors. The simply do not see blues at all. The eye structure is likely only dichromate and likely yellow reds based on the spectral response of the two cone pigments. The sensitivity is mostly on the long end of the spectrum not the short. Red is long wave. So red yes blue no. Clearly you have very little understanding of the animal "feel" IR really?

    In pythons that have heat pit membrane is populated by the trigeminal nerve masses. This nerve carries signals are relayed to the optic tectum this processes the IR information and integrated with the optical information from the eye and the best guess is overlaid. If it can be separated and concentrated singly or not is open to debate. But they MOST certainly do not feel heat with the heat pits the 'see' heat. Not that this changes the response of the two cone pigments.

    If you are going to make blanket statements make sure they are correct.

    http://www.mapoflife.org/topics/topi...ion-in-snakes/
    http://jeb.biologists.org/content/202/14/1931.full.pdf



    LOL, go look at at infrared images of how pits, work, then get back to us
  • 10-26-2012, 04:45 PM
    kitedemon
    They are simulated read the science. heck read the article YOU posted...

    - - - Updated - - -

    In either case we are speaking of eyes all you have managed to prove is snakes sense red very very very well.
  • 10-26-2012, 06:34 PM
    sirj
    Thanks for all the suggestions everyone!

    I have a heat bulb over the cool side to keep the ambient temperature up (it has a black heat bulb in it right now). If I didn't have that the temperatures would be way too cool. It came with a dimmer, so I have to constantly adjust that. I think I'm going to get a timer for it so that it turns on when our air goes on.

    The "pretty insulation" suggestion sounds promising. I'll at least try insulating and see if that helps even things out a bit.

    I think I've solved my issues on the hot side after some fiddling. It stays at about 89 give or take a degree. My main problem is still the cool side, which can drop very very quickly if I am not careful. I go to school for art, so I'm sure I can beg some free insulation from the sculpture majors. I'll make something up quick and see if that helps any.
  • 10-26-2012, 07:02 PM
    AdamF
    Re: Having Temp Trouble
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by kitedemon View Post
    They are simulated read the science. heck read the article YOU posted...

    - - - Updated - - -

    In either case we are speaking of eyes all you have managed to prove is snakes sense red very very very well.


    I know they are simulated, based on science. They also said a snake can "see: a human hand better in a cooler room than in a warmer room. Being the user of big words, pretending to impress, I'm sure you know why. The hand is the same color, but the pits tell the brain the outline (see) of the object based on HEAT, not color.

    nuff said
  • 10-26-2012, 08:20 PM
    kitedemon
    Oh my goodness First, no person knows how a snake brain interprets images from the eyes and heat pits the same part of the brain is used for both so the example from an IR camera is unlikely to be accurate at all as the visual information is processed with that at the same time. Snakes do not FEEL with heat pits (heat as you stated) they 'see' it with heat pits from a distance. Unless you mean feel and see are the same?

    The discussion is do snakes see red with their eyes. YES they have cones that have pigments that correspond to reds and yellows that is about it. The eyes see red. Red light would appear clear and obvious to a python. This is noted and explained in the neuroscience article the same one your posted article is based on the research of. That same article carries on to describe the cones and eye not being very sensitive to Ultraviolet (just before the deep blue part of the spectrum) and that it would have little visual impact but perhaps to increase contrast. You stated they do not see red and then went off on a tangent about heat pits which very clearly are used to detect red light beyond out visual range (INFRARED) AFTER stating snakes CANNOT see RED, clearly, they can then you post an article that CLEARLY states the same thing I have been saying all along.

    What are you trying to say? Snakes do not see RED light they feel heat? The heat pits do not sense INFRARED from a distance and the it is not processed by the optical centres of the brain, and they see human visual blue light well? In contradiction to all the science on Royal Pythons available?

    I have simply corrected your false statements. Things that are simply untrue, and you argue and present information that proves you incorrect? I am sorry if English is not your first language, using generic words like feel (usually applied to touch) and see (applied to wavelengths with optical bits) interchangeably is confusing as it is not typical meanings of those words. The parts of a snake have names I don't see any problem with using the name of the part you are speaking of. I suppose I could have said the eye scale and not used spectacle scale but it is the spectacle sorry if you find the correct names complex.
  • 10-26-2012, 08:33 PM
    kitedemon
    Do you know the 'spectrum' ?

    UV-violet-blue-green-yellow-orange-red-infrared

    Maybe I can simplify things for you. Pythons sense well from the Yellow to the infrared part of the spectrum the other end they do not have good sensing of (UV-violet and blue) Blue in basically invisible and beyond the ability to sense. Red is very easily for pythons to sense. Why Blue is better than red light. HEAT is not different than LIGHT that is why heat lamps are always red. They are in the near infrared spectrum and into the full infrared spectrum. HEAT and Coloured light are the same, just at a different wavelength.

    - - - Updated - - -

    ULTRA means beyond Ultraviolet = beyond violet

    INFRA means further on Infrared = Further past red

    get it yet?
  • 10-27-2012, 11:34 AM
    AdamF
    Re: Having Temp Trouble
    Good luck proving to everyone how smart you are.


    Animals don't "feel" heat without touching it? This is how snakes with pits "see" their prey. The same "except"?
    I have black heat lamps. I have Halogen heat lamps, I have heat emitters. Also not sure why you write "sense" red, instead of "see" red.


    You say my info is false, and try to impress us with rods and cones. You cannot prove snakes see red, no matter how many ways you try to say it. Comparing it to lasers is silly.

    I can tell you for sure, how may animals behave under red lights and white, and it is vastly different. Have fun with your rods and cones.
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