• Hello!

    Either you have not registered on this site yet, or you are registered but have not logged in. In either case, you will not be able to use the full functionality of this site until you have registered, and then logged in after your registration has been approved.

    Registration is FREE, so please register so you can participate instead of remaining a lurker....

    Please be certain that the location field is correctly filled out when you register. All registrations that appear to be bogus will be rejected. Which means that if your location field does NOT match the actual location of your registration IP address, then your registration will be rejected.

    Sorry about the strictness of this requirement, but it is necessary to block spammers and scammers at the door as much as possible.

First hatchling of the year!!!

DeadMouse

Hungry, hungry Hognose!
First off, I'm in complete shock over this. This is about a clutch of 5 South American Tri-Color Hognose eggs that were laid all the way back on December 18. I was really anticipating them to hatch by mid-February and around that time, the eggs even started to dimple which caused me to believe they were ready to hatch. But after a week, nothing happened, so I carefully made a small incision into one of the eggs to see what was going on inside. Upon inspection, there was nothing but yolk. So, I kind of figured at that point that the eggs were either infertile or something else, but I would have thought that after 2 months, there were have been at least a partially developed baby. However, the eggs appeared every bit as healthy and white despite having started to cave in. So, I remoistened the vermiculite they were in and decided to just let them sit until they went bad. What did I have to lose at that point? I pretty much checked on the eggs every other day or so, but when I checked on them tonight, I only saw one egg on top of the vermiculite. All the other eggs were almost completely buried. This stumped me as I know I had not covered them like that and the last thing I really expected were any hatchlings. The first buried egg I pulled out of the vermiculite was empty, so I excitedly looked underneath the container and there was a little baby buried all the way at the bottom. So, after 3 long months, I finally received vindication for my patient waiting...

tri-color_hatchling.jpg


The little guy only weighs in at 4 grams, but appears healthy and alert. Hopefully after a week or two, I can get it to eat. This is my first year of actually producing a South American Hognose. Last year we suffered a tragic loss when our original female laid some dud eggs and then mysteriously died a few months later. We thought that perhaps the male we bred her to was infertile since all of those eggs were infertile, but I decided to try him again with a different female this year. This is the first year that the mother of these eggs was bred. So far so good. I even have a second clutch she laid for me last month incubating. So, if all goes well, we'll have quite a few babies by this summer!

By the way, this clutch is a genetic experiment to try and prove out whether the genetics of both parents are inheritable since both parents are completely Bi-Color (only black and white). From what I've been told, all babies from Bi-Color parents start out as Tri-Colors but lose most, if not all their red after a few sheds. It will be interesting to see if this actually happens as the few people that told me this were not entirely sure what the long term outcome of all hatchlings were. I imagine they probably sold them before really seeing any developmental changes in coloration.

:)
 
That is one awesome looking little hognose. I hope it keeps it's red. :)

Time will tell! Here's a pic of the father to give you an idea of what the Bi-Colors look like:

twister-01.jpg


It will definitely be interesting to see if any color deviation will take place. To be honest, I'm kind of hoping that these will turn into Bi-Colors because Bi-Colors are actually a lot more uncommon than the Tri-Colors. So, I would like to see if it is a heritable trait or not. But they are very beautiful as Tri's. :)
 
Fantastic Troy! I knew it would be a good idea to leave them be and let them run their course. Babies have hatched from much worse off eggs before... I had a feeling something was in there ;) I'm sorry that you only got one baby out of it, but it is definitely a gorgeous little one! Keep us updated on the progress (or lack thereof) of the color change. I'm definitely interested in how that turns out :)
 
Hey- there could be more! I'll never forget listening to Jenea's adventures with hatching them. New hatchlings go WILD- burying the other eggs, escaping...

Congratulations! He's a cutie!

I saw a gorgeous bi-color at the last show I was at- and a female at that. I was very close to taking her home.
 
Aww, it is a cute little hatchling, and a survivor at that! Do let us know about the other eggs, if they hatch, go bad, or whatnot!
 
Thanks everybody for the wonderful comments! :)

Fantastic Troy! I knew it would be a good idea to leave them be and let them run their course. Babies have hatched from much worse off eggs before... I had a feeling something was in there ;)

Yes you did! Thanks for your encouraging support through this, I really needed it. :)

I'm sorry that you only got one baby out of it, but it is definitely a gorgeous little one!

Actually, the other 4 eggs are still there and I'm hoping there's a good chance that at least one or two of those will hatch out too. Even the one I slit into was left to chance in the container. I'll definitely keep this thread updated if any more babies emerge.

Keep us updated on the progress (or lack thereof) of the color change. I'm definitely interested in how that turns out :)

You and me both. The few people I talked to about this did not seem entirely 100% sure about the neonate tri-color change to yearling bi-color, but that was what they believed happen. Unfortunately, the people I got all of my Bi-Colors from did not seem to have any long term experience with them like Jenea has. Perhaps that is my void to fulfill, who knows. :)

Thanks again everybody, I really needed this major victory after what started out as a completely terrible day yesterday, with a toilet tank cracking and flooding one of the bathrooms, ended with another precious life coming into the world. :dancer:
 
I'm glad to hear there is still a chance for more from this group! I hope you'll keep us all posted with your hognose hatchlings!
 
congrats Troy! That is so cool. I hope that baby will do well for you, I have had 2 - 3 gram corns hatch before and do well even if they had to be started on pinky heads. So I think your hoggie will be OK. I have my fingers crossed for the rest of those eggs!
 
Here's baby #2 weighing in at ~4.5 grams that just hatched this morning:
tri-color_hatchling-02.jpg


There's still 3 eggs left and 2 have already started slitting their eggs, so hopefully within the next day or two we'll see a couple of more beautiful hoggie faces! :D
 
Hooray!!! That is wonderful! I am soooo happy for you! Can't wait to see how many hatch in the end and then see how they develop!

So are you going to be selling any of these little ones?
 
Fantastic news Troy and what an interesting little "experiment" as well. I didn't know about the tricolored/bicolored color changing thing. Very cool and I certainly hope you get us updated as they progress!
 
Back
Top