Here are some pictures
Sorry that I have a million questions these are my first newts!
I've seen on youtube someone keep their babies in a layered office storage shelve.
Would I be able to do this with a draw for eggs, hatchlings and bigger hatchlings? Or would aeration be a problem? I could use oxygen weed or slow release oxygen tabs would that be sufficient?
:ufo:
Eggs and larvae of my pyrrhos always do best in mature systems with regular small percentage water changes rather than sterile systems with big water changes. I know the sterile way works well for Axolotls, but I find I get high mortality when I try to raise Cynops or Tylototriton that way.
I would either leave them with the parents, or move them to a normal, weedy aquarium, ideally both. Cannibalism is not an issue between larvae of different sizes in my experience and adults will not normally eat their own young once they've hatched, but they love eating their own eggs, especially the females! So I would add loads more live plants to the parents tank to make them harder to find.
A common mistake is to try and rear more larvae than you can feed. If the food is scarce it can mean the whole lot starve to death, so be realistic when collecting eggs. I started with ten eggs the first time I raised pyrrhos and it gave me a lot of slack when learning the ropes.
Good luck, and don't forget to keep us updated!
Eta, Beautiful animals, they look like the Kanto race, do you know where they originated.