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I have a red footed tortoise, up till now I have had him on and all vegetarian diet. I wanted to add a little protein, would egg beaters be a good solution, the have no carbs nor fat, 100% protein. I don't want him to get too much protein either, how often should i give him protein? He is just under a year and he eats every other day.

2006-12-18 02:09:30 · 3 answers · asked by Patricia 2 in Pets Reptiles

3 answers

Red-foots should have less than 5% of their regular diet in protein, but you don't have to be so picky! A naturally occuring level of carbs and fats is usually not a problem.

Hard-boiled or scrambled eggs with shells mashed in are great- protein and calcium! An occasional pinky, bug, worm, etc. works, or you can try some organ meat (like beef heart), fish, or cooked chicken. You can also use some high-end pet foods that don't have much fat, ash, etc. in it.

The key is to avoid fatty or overly oily foods (like most red meats, hot dogs, cheap pet foods, etc.), AND to practice good portion control.

If you are offering a cup of food, less than a tablespoon of it would be proteins. (Note- you can average this over a few meals if you want as long as you can control the portions! One source recommends a hard-boiled egg mashed with shell every week for the main protein load.)

2006-12-18 05:25:33 · answer #1 · answered by Madkins007 7 · 0 1

Red-foot Tortoise: Rainforest species that likes hot, humid stipulations with low gentle. Hermann's Tortoise: Mediterranean species that likes hot, sunny stipulations with ordinary humidity. Bearded Dragon: Australian barren region species that likes scorching, dry, sunny stipulations. An skilled keeper might no longer hold any of those within the equal habitat- it's regarded a nasty proposal to combine species from exclusive areas. If I HAD to position 2 in combination, I might positioned the tortoises in combination. The temp levels for the 2 tortoises are approximately the equal- eighty-88F, despite the fact that the Hermann's like a hotter scorching spot and a cooler cool zone. If the habitat is enormous sufficient, this isn't a truly situation. Make certain the Red-foot has a depressing humid hiding house to retreat to, and feed them individually due to the fact the Red-foot commonly eats a wetter, extra fruit-heavy vitamin than the drier, grass-situated vitamin of the Hermann's.

2016-09-03 16:10:24 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Maybe try him on some legumes, I think that they would like plant protiens.

The only one I have ever kept was kept on a veggie diet and fed daily, it ate every day and grew rapidly. With a broad veggie diet I don't think they would need extra protien.

2006-12-18 13:27:28 · answer #3 · answered by Johnny 2 · 0 0

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