Quote Originally Posted by skylord0110 View Post
Yea it’s less a bout a specific question and more about the whole experience. It’s not much more complicated than housing these 2 together. I wouldn’t be using these 2 species if I knew of any better alternatives, or if there were multiple cases of failed cohabing for these 2(you could try this with two species that are from the same region in an attempt to recreate a wild environment on a smaller scale ). It’s just interesting because most people would say it’s wrong, but I hope my efforts can help prove that wrong. I realize you could just say, “well it worked for you but not everyone” which is true, but maybe it will help make people more open to it if they see actual documentation of the entire process. Because this would be very interesting to see this become more popular(If everything went well, it is not very likely to catch on, reptiles are not like fish keeping where you could grab random species from different countries and similar care requirements and then have them crawling around a cage together. But on the most basic level I’m doing it because I want to. I wanted more reptiles, and I found something that I find interesting, feasible, and good enough to make my capstone out of it. A capstone doesn’t have to answer a specific question or get a certain result. It’s more about what you did, why, how, and how it turned out. There are far more intricate as well as more basic capstones than mine, but thankfully mine is good enough. I plan on becoming a zoologist one day so I will definitely bring this up, but not as anything major(Again, for such an important project I just do not see this doing it justice for you. You will likely have the advantage that your teacher and classmates have no idea about anything reptile; so this could impress them, but this would have very little if any scientific relevance and would not help your zoology degree in any way).