bitsy
Owned by Corns since 1991
Just found one of my females, Sunshine, sliding around in a puddle of blood. It's very fresh and appears to have a small glob of poop in it. Pic attached.
She's in with a male at the moment for mating. I tried them a few weeks ago but they didn't seem interested. There's been a similar lack of activity on this occasion as well. I guess there's a possiblity that she's gravid if they managed a sneaky one the first time when I wasn't looking.
I've wiped her down with a damp cloth and can't find any injury on her, and I've seen/heard none of the usual scuffling/shuffling that would indicate they've been mating (they may just have been quiet though). The blood smears seem concentrated around her cloaca, so I think she's passed the blood - and very recently. She eats in a feeding tank, so I'm very confident that it's not internal damage caused by accidentally swallowing substrate. She's seven years old and this will be her fourth breeding season. She's never had a problem with mating, laying or post-laying recovery.
I'm sure the blood isn't from the male. He was under a hide at the opposite end of the tank when I found Sunshine and has no blood anywhere on him.
With impeccable timing, this has happened just after my usual vet closed for the evening. I've rung the emergency service who consulted their exotics expert. He says it sounds like cloaca trauma (that male must've moved faster than he has in the last couple of hours). He advised that she'd need antibiotics and fluids, but that as long as she was behaving normally (but don't they just love to do that), he wouldn't class it as an emergency. So I'm waiting for my usual vet's surgery to open first thing tomorrow morning.
She's now back in her disinfected viv alone (male is back in his own viv). I figured the best thing is to leave her in peace in familiar surroundings.
Does anyone else have ideas/insights whilst I'm waiting? Does the cloaca trauma theory sound about right? Has anyone experienced it? Thanks for any views. Blimey I've been keeping Corns for twenty years now and it's still enough to throw me into a complete tizz.
She's in with a male at the moment for mating. I tried them a few weeks ago but they didn't seem interested. There's been a similar lack of activity on this occasion as well. I guess there's a possiblity that she's gravid if they managed a sneaky one the first time when I wasn't looking.
I've wiped her down with a damp cloth and can't find any injury on her, and I've seen/heard none of the usual scuffling/shuffling that would indicate they've been mating (they may just have been quiet though). The blood smears seem concentrated around her cloaca, so I think she's passed the blood - and very recently. She eats in a feeding tank, so I'm very confident that it's not internal damage caused by accidentally swallowing substrate. She's seven years old and this will be her fourth breeding season. She's never had a problem with mating, laying or post-laying recovery.
I'm sure the blood isn't from the male. He was under a hide at the opposite end of the tank when I found Sunshine and has no blood anywhere on him.
With impeccable timing, this has happened just after my usual vet closed for the evening. I've rung the emergency service who consulted their exotics expert. He says it sounds like cloaca trauma (that male must've moved faster than he has in the last couple of hours). He advised that she'd need antibiotics and fluids, but that as long as she was behaving normally (but don't they just love to do that), he wouldn't class it as an emergency. So I'm waiting for my usual vet's surgery to open first thing tomorrow morning.
She's now back in her disinfected viv alone (male is back in his own viv). I figured the best thing is to leave her in peace in familiar surroundings.
Does anyone else have ideas/insights whilst I'm waiting? Does the cloaca trauma theory sound about right? Has anyone experienced it? Thanks for any views. Blimey I've been keeping Corns for twenty years now and it's still enough to throw me into a complete tizz.