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  1. #1
    Registered User Pug50's Avatar
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    Some plastics aren't suitable for reptiles

    Something I've learnt as a newbie that I didn't find out during pretty extensive research... or maybe just common sense that I missed out on... not all household plastics are inert, and some will really upset animals.

    I decided to replace the rather manky and cracked bamboo bridge/ramp that helped my small BP get up onto basking table/hot-hide in her tall viv. I found this lid of a cheap black plastic tub. I washed it and sanded down some sharp edges. I installed it in the morning and she immediately started roaming around. By the evening she was rubbing her face on it, and still didn't settle - she trashed her enclosure like she never has before and was jamming her nose in the gap between the sliding glass doors. I opened the doors and she leapt out into my hands.

    Sniffing it up close revealed that it smelt a slightly "plasticy". Warming it slightly more with a hair-dryer made a strong chemical smell. There is no marks on it to say exactly what sort of plastic it is, but the bottom line is that my BP really hates it, and I doubt it was healthy. I removed the ramp entirely - she's now big enough to get onto the table without one. She's now settled down and has since eaten so I think she's OK.



    At the very least, plastic items need to be heated and sniffed before put into enclosures... I guess the safest policy would be to only use items intended for animal housing.

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  3. #2
    Sometimes It Hurts... PitOnTheProwl's Avatar
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    A change in their environment will cause this.
    None of the surfaces should be getting that hot inside the enclosure if properly regulated....

  4. #3
    Registered User Pug50's Avatar
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    The black plastic was at 84F surface temperature in the enclosure (I was worried the black colour would make it too hot so I was monitoring it), and was slightly smelly. But pretty much the moment I put the hair-dryer on it, it made the whole room stink.

  5. #4
    Sometimes It Hurts... PitOnTheProwl's Avatar
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    If it had that much smell at room temperature then yeah it shouldn't have been used.
    Don't know if leaving it out in the sun would help gas it out?

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    Pug50 (04-11-2016)

  7. #5
    Registered User Pug50's Avatar
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    That's a good idea - I guess it might have been wrapped up in a shipping container with similar new plastics all the way from the factory.

  8. #6
    BPnet Veteran Darkbird's Avatar
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    Very likely, several of the new tubs I've bought for storage lately had a smell, and that was at room temp. The clear or translucent plastics don't seem to be prone to this, the tubs I bought were b!ack. Maybe something in that.
    Where are we going, and why am I in this handbasket?

    Never argue with idiots. They will drag you down to their level and beat you with their experience.
    Artificial intelligence is no match for natural stupidity.

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