Quote:
Originally Posted by trdyl
Cool snakes Philip!
So are you going to start raising slugs?
|
Snails and slugs may be a new hobby as a result of these snakes!
Quote:
Originally Posted by Paul
Cute bug-eyed lil devils!
What else do they eat? I would expect trying to supply them with enough slugs would be difficult.
|
At the moment they're proven to take small snails and slugs.
Not much else is known about these snakes.
However, I suspect they eat more than just snails and slugs.
I have a hunch they eat nightcrawlers (aka earthworms), and something along the lines of wax worms or silkworms.
For those who don't know, wax worms and silkworms are moth caterpillars.
The reason I believe this is that I observed some light digging behavior with these snakes. They plant their snouts into the ground and they twist about for a bit. One of them got some potting soil on the head scales and the nape. I think it's reasonable to believe they can dig for earthworms.
Not to mention, one of the ingredients in the potting soil that I have in the tank are earthworm castings. They may very well like that smell, and may be digging partly as a result of this.
Although the digging behavior could easily be because they are trying to make themselves comfortable before they sleep, idk.
Another reason I suspect that they are not solely predators of snails and slugs is that I read on a forum posting that someone had only kept these snakes for only 3 years, and they all just mysteriously died even when they were feeding.
Plus, because they are known to climb on small shrubs in the wild, I believe they also catch small, slow moving insects such as moth caterpillars.
I've also read that there may be other species of
Pareas that are not quite as specialized of an eater; taking small frogs and lizards on top of their diet of snails and slugs. So I think this species is also not a very specialized feeder - although they are somewhat unusual feeders.
From what I've seen so far (I just bought them), they are not 100% arboreal. They sleep in the cover of fallen branches, and low laying vegetation, rather than high up on branches. Underneath leaf litter and rock crevices may also be a favorite sleeping spot.
As I type this, one is sleeping beneath a branch and the leaves of a nearby
Fittonia verschaffeltii. The other is on the ground next to a branch, in the corner of the tank.
These are nocturnal animals, btw.