Posted by:
SHvar
at Mon Jun 12 11:02:40 2006 [ Email Message ] [ Show All Posts by SHvar ]
1 is their genetic ability, what size does that species normally obtain full grown.
2 is husbandry, is one given the opportunity to have the same resources as another? Is one ating more than the other? Does one have the ability to make use of the food offered, and one is not through conditions.
3 is sex, yes, females are supposed to get and stay smaller, so comes some examples a wild nile monitor caught in a school playground bordering the river once was 7ft 11 3/4 inches long, she was female, largest example known of officially, how big can they get, who knows. There are other examples, I have one in my collection, a female, Sobek, shes going to be 5 years old in Decemeber, she was CBB by Rob Faust, a BT/WT/WT cross, she was 16 inches when I got her at 2 months old, at 1 year old she was 5ft long, at 2 years old she was 6ft long, at 3 years old she was 6ft 2 inches, a year later at 4 she was 6ft 3 inches long, now she has been 6ft 4 inches long and 31 lbs. They do most of their growing in their first year, followed by the second, then 3rd and so on it reduces as they age. They can make up for lost opportunities and grow much later in life, I had a cape banded WT male that was 9-9.5 yrs old when he was given to me, he grew from 3-4ft in a few months time, he was passed through many hands over his first 6 years of life before a friend got him. This is my little girl Sobek.
[ Show Entire Thread ]
|