MegF. said:
How can a mother snake in the wild determine pH of the soil she decides to lay in?
I never said they could, but it is obvious that they have SOME ability to determine pH. You and I can - why couldn't a snake? Obviously, humans can't do it that well. Maybe snakes can't either, but I suspect they can do it better than us thanks to their extra sense organ.
MegF. said:
I figure the pH varies constantly,
From clutch to clutch in the wild? Maybe. During incubation of a clutch? Hmmmm, I count it very seriously. Unless they are getting hit with a LOT of water to move ions in and out, pH won't change much in this situation. Of course, that much water would cause other problems resulting in low hatch success.
MegF. said:
I don't think they are as sensitive to pH as they are to temps and humidity.
Ahhhh, you are problem right, but people monitor temps and humidity while typically ignoring pH. Additionally, pH is very difficult to change in an incubation media. I can add more water if it is too dry. I can warm it up if it is too cold. If the pH is wrong, I'm screwed. I bet it is the same for almost everyone. THIS is why I recommend a mixture that "fixes" the pH before it becomesa problem - that you might not even know about. I admit the problem is a small one, but the risk is large enough so that the few extra cents and second to do it right (my opinion) is worth it.
Also, mold IS very sensitive to pH. More so, I suspect, than eggs. This should be obvious. The eggs ability to fight off mold is obviously a "dose response" curve with pH. Duh again. I'm not necessarily referring to an eggs ability to survive in a slighlty off kilter pH incubation media - I'm referring to molds ability to grow and attack an egg at specific pH levels.
MegF. said:
As far as moldy eggs hatching, the point is, the mold did not appreciatively affect the egg itself.
What? You must have misread where I said the babies came out tiny ansd a large portion of the egg was solid (instead of being food for the developing embryo). If you don't call that "appreciatively affecting the egg" then I have no clue what you would call that except death of the embryo....lol. I didn't measure any of them, but I'd say many were ~60% of the mass of a normal clutchmate. Some were so small, but fully formed and otherwise healthy looking, that feeding pinks were out of the question. I know I tried heads of "reds," but I don't remember now if any of them ate or not. I know I would have just frozen the ones that didn't eat since they were so small.
MegF. said:
Most likely even if you didn't treat the egg it would have hatched. Hard to say.
No it isn't. The mold was spreading until I treated them. The ones not treated didn't hatch. The area where the mold did spread before treatment was the solid area - smaller area = larger babies and vice versa. Conclusion: when moldattacks, it CAN kill good eggs even when temp and humidity are correct.
MegF. said:
As for touching the eggs, I don't do it other than to transfer the eggs from the laying box to the egg boxes. They are then covered in the perlite and a layer of damp moss and not touched again.
I actually don't get bothered by touching my eggs. Not really. I take them out, handle them as necessary (including separating them when necessary), and putting them in my incubation boxes. "Good eggs hatch" so they take care of themselves once I do that....as long as I provide them with the proper medium and moisture.....lol.
That's really the key: good eggs hatch. That's why so many different media work! The rare problems are why some of us recommend one media type over another. Sure, if you only produce a dozen clutches or so a season, you chance of seeing a "rare" problem is small. When you produce up to 2,000 eggs a season (breaking 2,000 before I cut back a few years ago was my personal record), you WILL start seeing the rare problems. It hurts when it is an "important" clutch - and you seek resolutions to reduce even rare events.
PLUS, cornsnake eggs are easy. Some of the other things we've done aren't. When you have a 6' long colubrid that only lays 4-5 eggs every other year, you treasure each one. PLUS, in our experience, larger colubrid eggs get more sensitive to changes than smaller colubrid eggs - probably due to the cube root law of volume to surface area!
The problem is that people put too much reliance on Kathy's book - as they will with Don's larger book in a couple of years - and consider it an "end all, be all" when it can't be. I bet there are a million things Kathy knows and wanted to put in the book but couldn't. (Heck, she's breed snakes for over twice the time I have breed snakes with more than I've had even at my peak and I see a bunch of things that were left out due to space/time that are beyond her control!) The book(s) have a finite (and small) number of allowable pages and the authors have a very finite amount of writing time. HOWEVER, the rare exceptions that they've come across or heard about are much larger than can realisitically be put in a book of that size for that selling price. In science, the rare events are usually more important than the common events. In the hobbyist side, the rare events are frequently OK to be ignored.