C oriental could they get lonely?

Canecorsonewt

New member
Joined
Oct 14, 2015
Messages
294
Reaction score
7
Points
0
Location
Minnesota
Country
United States
Display Name
Cliff
I've read that newts can be alone,im sure they can so can some people. The thing is my two c orientals are always touching i dont work so i check on them often. They are either touching or almost touching but always together. Do you guys and girls think they like company more than being alone?

If it matters i do think ones female and the other is male. They are very young a little over a year. But i think i see a difference already female seems like body is taller from belly to top of back then my posable male and she has a shorter tail.

Not trying to breed them, but how old is sexual maturity for c orientals. could that be why there always together?
 
Hers some bad pictures
 

Attachments

  • 20170823_193145.jpg
    20170823_193145.jpg
    429.6 KB · Views: 260
  • 20170823_193140.jpg
    20170823_193140.jpg
    420.5 KB · Views: 227
  • 20170823_193125.jpg
    20170823_193125.jpg
    395.8 KB · Views: 226
It's an interesting observation, and I see the same thing with my pyrrhogaster sometimes, but I've always thought it was because the different individual newts all chose the same best spot to rest, hide or wait for food etc rather than a social thing. I've also come across groups of Llissotriton vulgaris hiding in the same places when on land.
I'm pretty sure they don't suffer when kept alone. I've raised baby pyrrhos alone almost to adulthood, and when they are eventually let loose in the adult tank they don't even bat an eyelid when they see another newt for the first time. Mind you, its not long before they're hanging out in the same places as the others though...
 
Last edited:
General chit-chat
Help Users
  • No one is chatting at the moment.
    RyanLHawk: Spotted +1
    Back
    Top