KJUN
Well-known member
> I know rats and mice are different organisms,
They aren't sister taxa or anything like that. Heck, they are only, at best, sister genera. I don't feel all that close to animals in a genera similarly related to mine.....lol.
> but until someone makes a "nutrition chart" that says a) how much protein, fat, and carbs and vitamins and minerals each one has and
Comeon. That information has been available for a couple of DECADES. Just because you don't know it, doesn't mean you should go around saying there is no difference.
> b) that this makes a health difference for corns, I'm going to be a little skeptical.
That's fine. Based on what empirical evidence, might I ask, do you find that higher fat ratios wouldn't be less healthy for a snake. (Remember that captive mice are already "fat" compared to wild diets - just like range beef is more lean than grain-fed beef.) I'm sure you consider a McDonald's Cheeseburger as healthy for you as baked skinless turkey, a salad with low fat dressing, a baked sweet potatoe, and an apple for desert. Right? LOL. To a snake, the mouse is a baked chicken breast and the rat is a fried McDonald's hamburger......lol.
> But if there is such a study I'd love to read it! I know someone showed quite clearly that slitting the back of pinkies improved growth rates, so maybe someone's done a rat-vs-mouse pink study too?
That "study" did not "show" anything other than his couple of snakes grew better for a few weeks. What it also didn't show was how genetics and/or starting size affected the outcome. That was a joke, and nothing more, that is too premature to be taken as anything more than a stepping stone for someone who really DOES want to test it for validity in a robust manner. That "study" was not robust, and it only provide a shakey grown for people to make claims based on what they WANT to believe and not on what is supported by hard data and reasoning. Of course, you are ignoring the posts from someone else saying dystocia increased once they started slitting meals. Does that sound like a good benefit. Anyway - even if this is true - increase in mass may not be the same as good growth. Increasing stored FAT is a bad thing in captiviity.
Obesity is the #1 epidemic in captive snakes right now!.....and it is avoidable if the owners care enough to do so.
They aren't sister taxa or anything like that. Heck, they are only, at best, sister genera. I don't feel all that close to animals in a genera similarly related to mine.....lol.
> but until someone makes a "nutrition chart" that says a) how much protein, fat, and carbs and vitamins and minerals each one has and
Comeon. That information has been available for a couple of DECADES. Just because you don't know it, doesn't mean you should go around saying there is no difference.
> b) that this makes a health difference for corns, I'm going to be a little skeptical.
That's fine. Based on what empirical evidence, might I ask, do you find that higher fat ratios wouldn't be less healthy for a snake. (Remember that captive mice are already "fat" compared to wild diets - just like range beef is more lean than grain-fed beef.) I'm sure you consider a McDonald's Cheeseburger as healthy for you as baked skinless turkey, a salad with low fat dressing, a baked sweet potatoe, and an apple for desert. Right? LOL. To a snake, the mouse is a baked chicken breast and the rat is a fried McDonald's hamburger......lol.
> But if there is such a study I'd love to read it! I know someone showed quite clearly that slitting the back of pinkies improved growth rates, so maybe someone's done a rat-vs-mouse pink study too?
That "study" did not "show" anything other than his couple of snakes grew better for a few weeks. What it also didn't show was how genetics and/or starting size affected the outcome. That was a joke, and nothing more, that is too premature to be taken as anything more than a stepping stone for someone who really DOES want to test it for validity in a robust manner. That "study" was not robust, and it only provide a shakey grown for people to make claims based on what they WANT to believe and not on what is supported by hard data and reasoning. Of course, you are ignoring the posts from someone else saying dystocia increased once they started slitting meals. Does that sound like a good benefit. Anyway - even if this is true - increase in mass may not be the same as good growth. Increasing stored FAT is a bad thing in captiviity.
Obesity is the #1 epidemic in captive snakes right now!.....and it is avoidable if the owners care enough to do so.