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#1 (permalink) |
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Hi, I'm New Here!
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: NY
Posts: 5
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What
Do you guys think? I made this one awhile ago and... What do you think?
freewebs.com/sparkyleo
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HIIII 1.Tink leopard gecko 2.Dimond leopard gecko 3. JJ Ball python freewebs.com/sparkyleo |
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#2 (permalink) | |
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"Fourth shed, A Success"
Join Date: Aug 2006
Posts: 823
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Re: What
Quote:
my adult garter eats full mice not pinkies for example, and why should I avoid goldfish? (Please anyone.. i have fed goldfish in the past, why should I avoid them?) and the first page is unreadable (white text on white-ish back ground) but otherwise not bad for a starting point for people to start keeping garters... |
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#3 (permalink) |
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Hi, I'm New Here!
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: NY
Posts: 5
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Re: What
Goldfish are one of the worst to feed... If you check there scales come off really easlie, and are extremely slimy... Which equals B1 defency.
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HIIII 1.Tink leopard gecko 2.Dimond leopard gecko 3. JJ Ball python freewebs.com/sparkyleo |
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#4 (permalink) |
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Dutch, bold and Thamnophis-crazy
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There are many people who feed their fiseating snakes only goldfish without problems.
In theory you will have to add Vitamin B1 (Thiamine) when you feed them. But I know from people who never added any vitamins and gave their Thamnophis only goldfish. Has never given any problem. I do not know what wisdom is in this case. I personally do not feed them. But when I would feed them, I would give them as a part of a bigger assortment of foodanimals. Never would this be the only food they would get.
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It is always advisable to be a loser if you cannot become a winner.
Frank Zappa |
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#5 (permalink) |
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Old and wise snake
Join Date: Nov 2006
Posts: 919
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Re: What
It is my understanding that goldfish can be toxic due to the chemical that makes them orange. Apparently this chemical can build up in the snake... so it is not just a problem with thyaminase... at least that is what I have been told...
I did feed my FL Blue garter goldfish, but always bought the white ones for this reason... and I also fed minnows and Chubs, as well as nightcrawlers. Variety of foods is always better than feeding one thing continuously, due to the different nutrition in various foods.
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KitKat "Acts of kindness should never be random."
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#6 (permalink) |
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Moderator
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Alaska, USA
Posts: 1,611
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Re: What
Hi all,
I read this post a while ago and wanted to respond, but I lost track of which thread it was in . They say the mind is the first thing to go . I'll give a more thorough answer later. Maybe I'll do a write-up on it since it's such a common question. The short answer involves thiaminase enzymes, and the concentration of thiaminase enzymes in an organism determines their pathogenicity. There's a wide variety of effects that thiaminase exposure can produce, ranging from diminished growth to sterility and even death. Individual variation and concentration play a role in determining why one organism may succomb while another (eating the same diet) appears healthy. The scales aren't toxic, and the pigments that cause goldfish to be orange are called carotenoids. Some people actually supplement their pet's diet with carotenoids, xanthanoids, porphyrins, and flavinoids to bring out more vivid coloration. They're not toxic unless they reach impractically high levels. I'll write more later, Rick |
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#8 (permalink) |
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Thamnophis Addict
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: South Carolina
Posts: 1,960
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Re: What
Goldfish aren"t artifically colored. The color is totally natural.
I have been raising them in a garden pond for a number of years. As hatchling they are a dark green coloration, I suppost for hiding. As they mature the color turns to a bright orange naturally. Sid |
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#10 (permalink) |
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Moderator
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Alaska, USA
Posts: 1,611
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Re: What
Yes, their color is natural, but I was saying that people "enhance" their natural coloration by supplementing the diet of a variety of organisms with carotenoids, etc. It "brightens" their natural colors. Goldfish, like all fish, have cells that are genetically programmed to reflect a certain range of colors at maturity (chromaphores and melanophores), but diet has a lot to do with whether or not they'll be able to (and how intensely they will) express that coloration.
Carotenoids are made by plants (aquatic and terrestrial). The carotenoids are eaten by zooplankton where they become concentrated (they're lipophyllic). They accumulate at each higher level in the food web, and not coincidentally, they're added to almost every flaked fish food. If you see "xanth..." as an ingredient, it's providing the material to enhance yellows and browns; "cyan..." enhances blues & greens; shrimp or "carotenes" enhance red, orange, yellow; "porphyrins" normally enhance green, but can become red (depending on their oxidation state); "flavinoids" provide blue, red, and purple and so on. I've had direct experience with this phenomenon during research toward my PhD in Biological Sciences. I've attached two pictures of fish I've raised that show how profoundly diet can influence coloration. Remember, most people would consider both of these fish to be "naturally" red & blue during reproduction, but diet and genetics both play major roles. Look at the photo gallery for more details on their dietary differences. This is the same phenomenon that causes flamingos to be whitish in captivity (unless they're supplemented with dietary carotenoids) and pink in the wild. Rick
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