I kept various species of salamanders for many years. The care of your salamanders depends on the breed you have. Salamanders can be aquatic, semi-aquatic or live completely on land depending on the species. The newts sold in pet shops are in water most of the time but will climb onto Water Lilly pads ect. The Mud Puppy Salamander never looses its gills so it is totally aquatic. However, Tiger and Marbled Salamanders live on land in moist areas after they become an adult. You need to know the requirements for the type of salamander you have. They are typically pretty easy to keep. Most of mine ate worms. Larger aquatic salamanders will eat fish. Some commonly kept salamander breeds are Spotted, Tiger, Marbled and Fire Salamanders. Red Spotted and Fire Bellied Newts are also commonly keptas well. Mud Puppies are larger and not sold as much as the others.They also require more space. Make sure your aquarium is properly set up for whatever species you buy. The salamanders that live out of water will need a place to hide as they would in the wild.
2007-11-04 15:01:36
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answer #1
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answered by Caveman 3
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Taking animals out of the tank to feed them is a notoriously undesirable habit because it promotes laziness once you position nutrition contained in the tank as you're meant to, as well as merchandising weight problems, it is already a subject matter with salamanders' slow metabolisms. also, waving a nutrition merchandise in an animal's face in easy words works at the same time as the animal is a dogs, monkey, or human. the different animal thinks you're loopy or risky and refuses to take nutrition. Hand feeding can in easy words be executed once you've kept the animal for a at the same time as and it has grow to be standard with you. shifting nutrition is in a lot of cases awesome, so stay crickets or different sorts of worms, jointly with mealworms, superworms, butterworms, or waxworms are all achievable concepts. Feeding tweezers are really by no skill used except you try accessible feed a snake or different risky animal jointly with a visual demonstrate unit and do not pick to get bitten.
2016-10-23 09:55:59
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answer #2
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answered by ? 4
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in addition to the wonderful advice above, here is a great site..
caudata.org
they have care info and forums for EVERY type of salamander, newt and tailed amphibian.
have fun!
2007-11-05 09:24:41
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answer #3
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answered by eiere 6
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There are many differnet types of slamanders and newts and they all have different needs. I suggest that if you caught it in the wild, you should let it go.
2007-11-04 13:41:35
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answer #4
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answered by C-Dog 1
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Here is an excellent website that will tell you all you need to know!
http://newt150.tripod.com/setup.shtml
2007-11-04 10:51:44
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answer #5
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answered by KimbeeJ 7
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