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My female red eared slider is spending alot of time out of the water and under a heat lamp. Some thing she has never done. If she is pregnant how long before she lays her eggs. There are three males to 1 female the female being the largest in the tank. All turtles are mating age 4 to 6 inch shells for the males and 9 to 10 inch shell for the female.

2006-11-10 11:14:26 · 4 answers · asked by xxmack675hpxx 3 in Pets Reptiles

4 answers

She's the right size for it.

Check the soft tissues around the rear legs. As the eggs get bigger, it should push out on the skin and you can often even feel the eggs in the shell. When they are really big, you can pretty much see the eggs themselves bulging out.

2006-11-11 14:04:31 · answer #1 · answered by Madkins007 7 · 2 1

If the female is GRAVID she would be waiting to flow loopy attempting to get out of the tank to place her eggs. you will ought to take her out and enable her lay her eggs in some delicate airborne dirt and dirt. this could sound cruel, even though it is going to possibly be ultimate to then break the eggs. RES are very over populated and additionally you maximum possibly don't have the resouces to preserve 10 extra turtles. it could be kinder to maintain the eggs from springing up into turtles then to enable the little babies go through. Seperate the two turtle now. in the event that they have not bred, you could avert it. whether they have bred there is an somewhat stable risk they're going to now activate one yet another and you could actually o.k. maime or kill the different. (playstation the female will evetually ought to positioned eggs the two way. she would be waiting to easily lay infertile eggs if she isn't fertilized via the male. She ought to be allowed to place those eggs outdoors of in a desirable nesting container, or she could egg bind and die.)

2016-12-14 05:02:39 · answer #2 · answered by karsten 4 · 0 0

An x-ray is about the only way you'll know until she starts going into her laying behaviors. Here's an excellent page on breeding care. Honestly...I don't approve of breeding herps...or animals in general. I've become pretty cynical being in rescue and seeing what overpopulation, poor care and lack of knowlegde for new owners does to many of these animals, but at the same time...I want it done right. Knowledge truly is a powerful tool. Please breed responsibly...:-)

2006-11-10 12:40:11 · answer #3 · answered by prism_wolf 4 · 2 4

I have to turtles, also. But, apparently.... I have no idea if about " turtle pregnancy."

2006-11-10 11:41:49 · answer #4 · answered by Michael W 1 · 0 5

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