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Posted by: tglazie at Thu Nov 15 11:01:47 2007 [ Report Abuse ] [ Email Message ] [ Show All Posts by tglazie ] I find that this really depends upon the personality of your redfoot. I have four animals in my colony that I've raised since they were hatchlings, and two that I purchased as wild caught sub adults, acclimated over a period of four years. As hatchlings, I tend to find that young redfoots spend much of their time hiding. This has a great deal to do with predation, as small tortoises in the wild (in a tropical savanna, more precisely) are easy prey for all manner of birds, mammals, and even certain large lizards and snakes. Also, young redfoots have much thinner, absorbant skin than do sulcatas and other desert dwellers, and as such, this act of hiding works to keep their water reserves in tact, very important in the savanas of Brazil, Bolivia, and Venezuela, where rain patterns are seasonally variable. [ Reply To This Message ] [ Subscribe to this Thread ] [ Show Entire Thread ] | ||
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