I've read some great info on this forum regarding maternally incubating a clutch. From what I've read it seems that feeding females who are maternally incubating is ok. Some will eat, some will not. This is my first clutch so I'm a bit paranoid about disturbing the natural process.
I bred a pastel male and a spider female. The mom spider is young (right around 3 years old) but she was fat and very healthy when she laid a clutch of 7 eggs. She is clearly hungry now however, I'm concerned about disturbing her by taking her out of the enclosure to feed her (frozen) in a separate large container (which I normally do.)
BIG NOTE: I also can't move her easily without disturbing her clutch because she is incubating in a nice cozy shelter inside the enclosure that she is filling up with her coils. I'm worried the eggs will roll/move if I move the shelter and take her out to feed her.
If I don't feed her it will have been about 3 1/2 months since this first-time mom will have eaten.
Questions:
- With my info above should I just thaw a small rat and leave it in the enclosure *outside* of the protective shelter she's in? Note: male is now in separate cage.
- Could she hurt an egg by striking at the thawed rat?
- Also, if she eats I'm assuming she'll get back on the egg clutch...?
- The temp is good (85-88F on clutch, 83F ambient) and the humidity is ok - should I not risk this and just let her be hungry until they hatch?
Much appreciated!