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Thread: On FIRE!

  1. #1
    BPnet Veteran blackcrystal22's Avatar
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    On FIRE!

    Ok.. I know it was cheesy..

    But recently I've been looking at Fire Skinks, and they seem pretty relative to take care of and I really want one since I have an open 20 gallon now.
    I was thinking about a plated lizard but they need a bigger enclosure that I can't get just yet.

    Anyone know first hand about these guys? I wanted to pick one up at the Tinley show but I've read they usually only come WC?

    Also, is it a yay or neigh for keeping a male and female together?
    Whats a good substrate that's bark/woody that will not have mite infestations?

    Thanks everyone.

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    Re: On FIRE!

    I hadn't ever heard of these until just the other day at PetCo they had one. I was kinda suprized. I don't know anything about them, but I just had to say something, since the only times I have heard of them have been within two days of eachother.

    Have you found out any more about them?
    ~ Shannon

    1.2 normal bp ~ Lilly (06) ~ Delilah (09) ~ Joey (06)
    1.0 cinnamon bp ~ Doughnut (08)
    1.0 mojave bp ~ Jay (08)
    0.1 pastel bp ~ Patsy (09)
    2.0 cats ~ Lil Bit (08) ~ Toby (08)

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    Re: On FIRE!

    I had to look them up to see what they were!!! very interesting creatures, cute too. I found this site, not sure if it's any helpful info.
    http://www.centralpets.com/php/searc....php?Story=262
    Stephanie


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    Apprentice SPAM Janitor MarkS's Avatar
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    Re: On FIRE!

    I like them, they are very pretty and interesting lizards. smaller then Blue Tongue skinks but not real small. I know they love to burrow. I've done some reading on these myself and always wondered about getting some but have never gotten around to it. One person I talked to said that they kept a small colony in a 40 gallon breeder aquarium with a good half a foot of mulch but hardly ever saw them because they were always dug in. He told me that when he broke the aquarium down for a thorough cleaning, he had found a couple of clumps of dessicated eggs so I guess that means they're egg layers and not live bearers like the blue tongues are. He told me he fed them pretty exclusively on crickets so I don't know if they'd take fruit and veggies as well. I'd be interesting to find out. If you get them, post up some pics and let us know what works for you.

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    BPnet Veteran blackcrystal22's Avatar
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    Re: On FIRE!

    Quote Originally Posted by MarkS View Post
    I like them, they are very pretty and interesting lizards. smaller then Blue Tongue skinks but not real small. I know they love to burrow. I've done some reading on these myself and always wondered about getting some but have never gotten around to it. One person I talked to said that they kept a small colony in a 40 gallon breeder aquarium with a good half a foot of mulch but hardly ever saw them because they were always dug in. He told me that when he broke the aquarium down for a thorough cleaning, he had found a couple of clumps of dessicated eggs so I guess that means they're egg layers and not live bearers like the blue tongues are. He told me he fed them pretty exclusively on crickets so I don't know if they'd take fruit and veggies as well. I'd be interesting to find out. If you get them, post up some pics and let us know what works for you.
    That's really cool, thanks guys!
    I still really want one, and I asked about them at Tinley, and one guy told me that they are very seasonal and usually WC or CH. They are pretty hard to find apparently. So if anyone has any leads on any please let me know. They're really cool skinks.

    If I don't get any leads on one, I'm going to buy a Schneider's Skink. Maybe I'll have a fire in my future.

    Thanks everyone!!

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    Re: On FIRE!

    If it is the Riopa Ferdinandi that you are interested in, we kept and bred them in the 90's and found them very easy lizards to both keep and breed.
    Here is a general guide of how to keep them:


    Feeeding.
    Fire Skinks are carnivorous, eating a variety of insects. Offer them crickets, mealworms, butterworms, silkworms, locusts and any other insect of similar size. Make sure the insects are gut loaded with nutritional food, and dusted with a calcium or multi-vitamin supplement. Always provide your Fire Skink with a medium-depth dish of water for bathing and drinking, changed and cleaned daily. Small mouse pinkies are relished by Fire Skinks and can be given once or twice weekly.

    Lighting, Temperature & Humidity
    Provide your Fire Skinks with a heat gradient ranging from 76 degrees F to 85 degrees F, with a basking spot reaching 90 degrees F. Keep the daytime lights on a 12 hour cycle. At night, drop the temperature to between 70 degrees F to 75 degrees F. Use full spectrum flourescent lighting as well, providing your Skinks with the needed UVB rays. Use incandescent lighting or a ceramic heat emitter to provide the heat.
    To keep the humidity high, give the interior of the vivarium/tank a fine misting with luke warm water daily. Take care to avoid spraying the heater/heat bulb directly.

    Housing
    Fire Skinks like to hide, so you will need to provide them with plenty of places to do so. A single Fire Skink can live comfortably in a 3' x 1.5' x 1.5' enclosure. Make sure to provide them with lots of branches and plant life, either real or fake. Orchid bark provides a good substrate' These guys also like to burrow, so provide a container with some dampened moss. Never use sand!

    You can visually sex Fire Skinks - males are a much brighter red than females and have black markings with white spots along their sides from the throat to mid body. Females are more of a reddish brown colour and lack the prominent black markings with the white spots.
    Males DO fight, so it is adviseable to keep them singly or in sexed pairs only - with plenty of hiding spaces to allow the female to escape the male's attentions!
    Fire Skinks are multi -clutched, the female can lay five or six small clutches per year if conditions are right and it is important to search possible laying areas regularly to remove and incubate any eggs found. Females will not lay in open areas, they will dig down close to rocks or under flat stones to lay thir eggs and even lay eggs inside potted plants.

    These notes are not extensive, but should give a guide to a first time keeper.
    Eric Davies

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