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paris

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i rinsed these earlier in the night and looked in on them a few hours later.....
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Congrats Paris! How many larvae did you have to care for now?
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geeze-i dunno....i dont have enough fingers and toes to count that high....
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here are a few spare photos-the larvae are like most paramesotriton larvae - they are black with white around the fringe of the tail and pink gills and white around the eyes. there are 4 legs -well sort of legs, there are two forward stumps but they are very rudimentary-no definition past the elbow-they just seem to stop. there are 2 very small elongate bumps at the rear end -these look to be rear legs. i wish to get a better camera someday.....i can see more stuff with my eye that i can show in a photograph-these are about as long as my thumbnail across - 1/2 inch.
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even though these 6 eggs were laid within a week of each other - 5 of the 6 hatched at the same time-the string of 3 seemed to have been laid at the same time. after most hatched there was one left behind. i picked it up to check it out, it was still very firm
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they arent like cynops or triturus eggs in the the skin lessens and the larvae eventually works it way out when it feel like it. when i was holding it it just popped and the larvae was sitting on my hand -it was a very fast process. if you look at these photos you can still see the artifacts of the cramped conditions in the eggs-they have an hourglass figure from the fold area. this is the hatchling that just popped out
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Congrats! That is awesome, I just saw my first Paramesotriton hongkongensis eggs today. It makes you feel proud.
 
Paris - make sure ytou don't introduce any cyclops as food. I used these a lot for Triturus larvae and assumed they would be fine for Paramesotriton. The cyclops ate most of my larvae alive over night.
Congrats and good luck!
Chris
 
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