G
Guest
·I recently aquired a young adult pair of cobalt tincs. The male is as voracious a feeder as I have ever seen. The female has been very slowly losing wait for 3-4 weeks since Ive had them. I watch them for many hours a day, and have never seen her eat. Ive tried fruitflies-mel and hydei, rice flour beetles-adults and larvae, springtails, pinhead crickets, field sweepings. She has no feeding response whatsoever. She is otherwise normal, not listless or unresponsive to stimuli. I have even tried to change the color of the substrate to improve visual contrast between the food item and the substrate. All have been to no avail.
I have tried treating with cutaneous calcium supplementation, as well as a water soluble vitamin/mineral mix. I havent treated for any kind of parasites, as I am trying to avoid harsh medications if possible. Ive also played with the temperature and humidity to try and find a solution.
One thing I noticed is that the frog has no reaction when you put your finger close to it. Even a vigorous movement of the hand right in front of her eyes illicited no response. As soon as you touch her though she makes a giant escape leap away from you. The male tinc retreats from you as soon as he sees you getting close to him. If I were to just throw a diagnosis a diagnosis out there, it almost seems like she's blind. Has anyone ever heard anything about blindness in herps, frogs, darts?
Any and all help would be greatly appreciated. I'll try anything at this point.
Thanks
Brett Berger
I have tried treating with cutaneous calcium supplementation, as well as a water soluble vitamin/mineral mix. I havent treated for any kind of parasites, as I am trying to avoid harsh medications if possible. Ive also played with the temperature and humidity to try and find a solution.
One thing I noticed is that the frog has no reaction when you put your finger close to it. Even a vigorous movement of the hand right in front of her eyes illicited no response. As soon as you touch her though she makes a giant escape leap away from you. The male tinc retreats from you as soon as he sees you getting close to him. If I were to just throw a diagnosis a diagnosis out there, it almost seems like she's blind. Has anyone ever heard anything about blindness in herps, frogs, darts?
Any and all help would be greatly appreciated. I'll try anything at this point.
Thanks
Brett Berger