Reptile & Amphibian Forums

Welcome to kingsnake.com's message board system. Here you may share and discuss information with others about your favorite reptile and amphibian related topics such as care and feeding, caging requirements, permits and licenses, and more. Launched in 1997, the kingsnake.com message board system is one of the oldest and largest systems on the internet.

Click here to visit Classifieds
Click for ZooMed
Click for 65% off Shipping with Reptiles 2 You

when is a female jackson ready to breed

reppinreps1134 Jun 28, 2007 10:57 PM

at wut age aproximatly. and how can i improve receptiveness.. the male is receptive but not the female.. any thing i can do would be helpful... same with panthers when are females ready and are there any signs for both that will help me know

Replies (2)

kinyonga Jun 29, 2007 11:26 AM

You said..."with panthers when are females ready and are there any signs"...first of all, I don't breed my female panthers until they are over a year of age. I want to make sure that they are done growing themselves before I put the demands of reproduction on them. If you hold the female outside of the male's cage so that they can both see each other you should know by the signs whether they are ready to mate or not. If the female remains calm and doesn't turn dark colors, sway, gape or lunge at the male, then she is receptive. If the male doesn't gape, hiss, or show any signs of aggression, then he is recognizing her as a receptive female. You can put them together if they both indicate that they are ready (of course). If either shows aggressive signs, then try a week or so later.

Regarding Jackson's..the same approach can be taken to see if they are receptive. Again, I wouldn't breed the female until I knew she was fullgrown.

If they are not receptive when you show them to each other...all you can do is keep trying until they are. Putting them together if either is not willing will lead to problems.

reppinreps1134 Jun 29, 2007 02:05 PM

okay it makes perfect sense to wait till full grown (which i think the female is)
i dont keep them in the cage, because i know when a cham is stress or nonreceptive... yet i have heard that there re little tricks like raiseing the heat in the female cages to simmulate the change of season and etc... (dont worry i havent raise the heat). but thank for the help i guess i will just wait it out and hope she becomes receptive.

Site Tools