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she is pregnat and kept digging around her cage looking for a safe place to burrow her eggs, a couple of days later she layed only one egg, then i noticed she is starting to become dehidrated and so im misting her now, and now a couple days after her first egg, she layed one more.
these eggs i would be pretty sure are fertile, though the one im incubating is as big as the CTRL key on your key board.
im really worried about her, she is really skinny now, and i put her in a 20 gallon bin thing filled with 1 foot of dirt and left her in for 3 hours with a light over it, she just sat in the same place for three hours, just laying there doing nothing,.
so what should i do?
she is skinny enough to see eggs in her stomach, i feed them crickets, i know i should give them lots more greens.

2007-03-15 04:04:21 · 6 answers · asked by D3V!N 5 in Pets Reptiles

6 answers

take her to a vet they may not be eggs

2007-03-15 07:06:16 · answer #1 · answered by Jack sparrow Luver 4 · 1 0

There are 2 options I actually have:a million. color-morph 2. well being a million. Beardies are available a lot of diverse "color-morphs". that signifies that they are bread to grant a particular color no longer generally contemporary in nature. Examples are: white, white goliath, pink, hearth-orange, blue, and so on. instead of being the common sand-brownish. Beardies will "come into their color", in the journey that they're a made from a color-morph, round 6 months old. UV gentle and organic photograph voltaic will exentuate the color. Do you've a fashion of understanding what the dad and mom of the beardie appeared like? If one or both had hues except the sandy-brown, this beardie may also be a color-morph. thus, the color replace is completely regularly occurring. 2. How is the demeaner of the beardie? Is it nevertheless eating ok? Is it particularly torpid? If its habit/eating has also replaced, your beardie may nicely be unwell and that i'd recommend taking it to a reptile professional vet. a ordinary vet should not be of help and probably received't even take it in.

2016-12-02 01:18:03 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

If she stops eating in the next day or two you need to get her to a vet that knows how to treat lizards. She may be egg bound.
The longer the eggs stay inside her, the more they calify (harden). Exrays can show for sure what is going on inside of her and how many (and what size) eggs she still might have. If her eggs are too large to pass, they will cause blockage and she (sadly) will die. Please seek professional help.

2007-03-15 04:11:38 · answer #3 · answered by mom tree 5 · 1 0

She's egg bound, this can be fatal given improper treatment. Take her to a herp vet and if you cant do that soon bathe her daily in warm water up to her shoulders. I'd keep her in a seperate tank then your other dragon for a while too and let her recover back to full health, especially if she isn't eating.

2007-03-15 16:57:01 · answer #4 · answered by Chris 2 · 0 0

She needs to go to the vet she is egg bound and will die if you do not take her to the vet!

2007-03-18 08:17:22 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

take her to the vet, she may be impacted, and if she is and doesnt get help getting the eggs out she will die.

2007-03-15 06:06:21 · answer #6 · answered by jenn 2 · 1 0

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