pdf - Arcadia Reptile
Transcription
pdf - Arcadia Reptile
THE ARCADIA GUIDE TO REPTILE & AMPHIBIAN NUTRITION JOHN COURTENEY-SMITH www.arcadia-reptile.com The Arcadia Guide to Reptile and Amphibian Nutrition Contents Foreword by Dr Mike Leahy 9 Introduction11 Science Found for Yourself is Better than Science Dictated!17 A Vet’s Perspective 21 Vitamins and Minerals 25 The Vitamin Groups 29 Vitamin A 32 Vitamin B Group 41 Vitamin C (Ascorbic Acid): 53 Vitamin D Group 56 D2 (Ergocalciferol): 61 Vitamin E 62 Vitamin K 64 Calcium 66 Copper72 Iodine 73 Iron74 Magnesium75 Phosphorus76 www.arcadia-reptile.com 5 The Arcadia Guide to Reptile and Amphibian Nutrition Potassium79 Selenium 81 Sodium82 Zinc 84 The Food Groups Carbohydrates Protein Fibre Fats Amino Acids Sugars 87 88 88 89 90 91 94 Self-supplementation and Earth Mineral Content 97 Food Sources and Limitations 103 Good Gut Flora and Parasites/ Verm-X and Constipation 111 Phytic Acid 123 Gut-loading125 Alfalfa 134 Insect/live-food safety 141 Live-food Nutrition and Variety 147 Live-food Species 149 Locusts149 Crickets151 6 www.arcadia-reptile.com The Arcadia Guide to Reptile and Amphibian Nutrition Mealworms152 Waxworms153 Fruit Flies 154 Fruit Beetle Larvae (Pachnoda) 155 Calci/Phoenix Worms 156 Cockroaches157 Turkistan Roaches (Blatta lateralis) 158 Silkworms159 Butterworms160 Bean Weevils (callosobruchus maculatus) 161 Earthworms (Lumbricus terrestris) 161 Snails 162 River Shrimp 165 Indian Stick Insects (Carausius morosus) 165 Bluebottles167 Springtails (Seira sp, Folsomia candida) 168 Tropical Woodlice (Trichorina tomentosa) 169 White Worms (Enchytraeus albidus) 169 Bloodworms170 Daphnia (Daphnia magna) 172 Aphids 172 The Application of Supplements 175 Obesity and Captive Animals 183 Hydration189 Wild Hydration 197 www.arcadia-reptile.com 7 The Arcadia Guide to Reptile and Amphibian Nutrition Brumation 201 Cleanliness209 Special Reference to Inverts 215 Special Reference to Amphibians 219 Safe-to-feed Plants Common Name Dandelions verses Carrots Blueberries-a useful treat Hibiscus Flowers Nasturtium Flowers Bee Pollen Manuka Honey 227 229 230 233 237 239 240 242 Variety Feeding from an Iguana Expert’s Perspective 245 Conclusion247 Thanks251 Glossary of Terms 253 Further Reading and Scientific Study 261 8 www.arcadia-reptile.com The Arcadia Guide to Reptile and Amphibian Nutrition Foreword by Dr Mike Leahy N obody I know has put as much thought into how we can learn from nature, using research and common sense, to improve the environments we provide to captive reptiles, amphibians and invertebrates. In this respect, John has been an inspiration to me, particularly when I was creating the Zoo-bus, where the depth of his knowledge and his willingness to dispense it were invaluable—qualities that will become very evident as you read this book. Having studied ecology at university, later specialising in microscopic organisms, and more recently having the privilege of filming some of the world’s most fascinating animals for the National Geographic Channels, it is very clear to me that one of the most fundamental requirements for any organism is nutrition. I well remember spending days changing the composition of growth media in the lab simply to get bacteria to grow successfully, so it is therefore not surprising that far more complex animals, from very diverse and sometimes extreme www.arcadia-reptile.com 9 The Arcadia Guide to Reptile and Amphibian Nutrition environments, have specific dietary requirements for good health, and that a balanced diet is essential. It is all too easy to fall into the trap of anthropomorphising when considering both animal welfare, and the diets non-human animals may require. However tempting it is to assume that other animals’ needs may be similar to our own, this may prove to be a big mistake. Very few reptiles—or any other animal, for that matter—exist by eating just one food source, and some food sources that humans enjoy eating can actually be toxic to other animals. As such, John set himself the task of determining what reptiles actually eat in the wild, what nutrients this diet may contain, and finally, how we can replicate this in our collections. Of course, this makes sense, but the work certainly wasn’t easy. I can only imagine the magnitude of the task. In John’s latest book you are guaranteed to discover many aspects of nutrition that have not been known or widely accepted before, as well as suggestions that may result in your own pet enjoying a longer and more comfortable life. As John says, ‘We should be seeking to see captive animals thrive in captivity and not just live a sterile life in a box’. By taking the time to read this book, you may become one step closer to achieving this. Dr Mike Leahy 10 www.arcadia-reptile.com The Arcadia Guide to Reptile and Amphibian Nutrition Introduction R eptiles and amphibians to me are simply both amazing and awe inspiring. In evolutionary terms, it is thought that the animal group known to us as amphibians and then reptiles occurred pretty early on, with birds following on shortly after. Certainly, there is an array of similarities between birds and reptiles even today, with most of the advice we are now given about forward-thinking reptile and amphibian care also able to be applied to captive bird care. Reptiles rather than being a backward group of ‘underworld’ animals with no real thought patterns, social hierarchy or feelings—or even any spacial awareness—are proving, at every level, to be massively advanced, and have been able to go on to thrive in most environments. One example of purposeful teamwork in reptiles can be seen in the Steppes runner (Eremias arguta), which appears to be a very social species that will work as a team to locate, corner, capture and dismember large prey sources, and which will then settle to eat in order of the social hierarchy. This is a brand new observation that has been made by captive breeders of this emerging species and has been reported directly to me. www.arcadia-reptile.com 11 The Arcadia Guide to Reptile and Amphibian Nutrition Mankind has caused colossal damage to the earth in an obsessive search of its resources of one kind or another, and this is/will continue to have a profound effect upon all wildlife, including reptiles and amphibians. We can expect to see whole populations of species disappear and avoidable diseases ravage whole continents. Much of this loss will be caused by climate change, pesticides, habitat destruction and the introduction of non-native species. The fire ant (Wassmania auropunctata), as an example, is responsible for an unswerving attack upon many life forms, including some of the rarest reptiles and amphibians on our planet. Rats and introduced cats are also responsible for the early deaths of hundreds of millions of animals each year. The odds are against the sheer diversity that we now enjoy unless large scale change can be introduced and the ongoing invasion of man stopped. As with all things, there will always be the exception to the rule: we can truly marvel at the adaptability and number explosion of some species. We only have to look at the tree snake populations on Guam or any of the other invasive reptiles that have colonised areas of the world and increased their populations very quickly. The fact that reptiles have been kept in captivity for so long and have bred so well to date with a limited amount of keeper knowledge is another testament to the determination of the group to replicate as a whole. 12 www.arcadia-reptile.com The Arcadia Guide to Reptile and Amphibian Nutrition The fact that reptiles have been kept in captivity for so long and have bred so well to date with a limited amount of keeper knowledge is another testament to the determination of the group to replicate as a whole.” This group of animals is commonly known as being Exo-Thermic or ‘cold blooded’. This is another expression that humans use to malign one another and is derived from the apparent sinister nature of reptiles. In simple terms, these species do not use food to generate heat and energy inside of their own bodies; rather, they rely upon solar energy in the form of infrared light (heat) to regulate their body temperatures. They, like almost all other living things, are able to use the wavelengths of light, known to us as UVB, directly from the sun in order to initiate and maintain the production of vitamins and hormones, including the extremely important vitamin D3, inside of the body (referred to as the D3 cycle). This lifesaving vitamin allows, amongst many other things, the effective absorption of calcium (Ca) back into the animal’s bones where it is stored to be finally released into the bloodstream. Reptiles, amphibians and birds also use a longer series of wavelengths of light that we refer to as UVA to view the world in a spectacular array of colours as yet invisible to humans. www.arcadia-reptile.com 13 The Arcadia Guide to Reptile and Amphibian Nutrition They are thought to be able to use this ability to effectively selfregulate their own exposure throughout their ecosystem. This form of sight is known as Tetrachromacy (four cone cells inside of the eye). Tetrachromats (those with this capability) are thought to be able to see, and seem to make use of 100 million colours, 99 million of which are thought to be invisible to Trichromats (three rod cells inside of the eye), including humans. To tetrachromats, this would indeed present the world as a very different place to the world viewed by humans. Reptiles are a very advanced group of animals as we can now see, although I believe that we are only just starting to scratch the surface of biological discovery and its eventual surprises. This incredible group of animals has evolved in-situ over millions of years to hunt down and forage food sources in the wild that will not only keep them alive but will also cause them to thrive in these habitats and to perpetuate the blood lines and whole species going forward. But how do they do this? How do they seemingly select food sources? And is it even possible that reptiles and amphibians can self-supplement their own diets with natural minerals when in the wild? One thing is for sure: as humans, we will always struggle to truly understand nature, and as part of this nature, reptiles and 14 www.arcadia-reptile.com The Arcadia Guide to Reptile and Amphibian Nutrition amphibians are just another mystery waiting to be unlocked. As time passes, we will become more and more aware of the amazing abilities they have, as well as just how they exploit the eco-systems in which they live and thrive. We will never know all that there is to know about every species; however, if we keep an open mind and are happy to stand in the gap and push the boundaries of captive care, we will eventually begin to uncover some of these mysteries and will be able to incorporate these things into our everyday captive care regimes. The purpose of this book is to start to uncover some of the food sources, key vitamins and minerals available to reptiles in the wild, and to find out how, why and whether or not we should provide them to our captive animals, as well as their ultimate relationship to one another. We will seek to push the boundaries of care and push into the mainstream a whole series of new husbandry techniques with the aim of seeing captive reptile thrive rather than merely surviving in captivity. The purpose of this book is to start to uncover some of the food sources, key vitamins and minerals available to reptiles in the wild.” www.arcadia-reptile.com 15