Hiya Paris. I wonder if your newts lack of enthusiasm for bloodworm has to do with the quality of bloodworm you provide them. Here in Japan, the cheapy type is visibly different from the top quality type. Put the cheapy type in a glass of water next to one with the top quality type, and you'll notice that the individual worms are twice as thick, and in better condition overall. The cheapy type tends to float while the expensive type sinks (after melting). The cheapy type also reddens the water, as it if contains artificial coloring even. Plus, the expensive type contains various added nutrients and has gone through three stages of sterilization. The trick is to find the expensive type at a cheap price, and this I have accomplished by buying it from a place that sells it at almost no profit as a means of luring customers to the shop, where they inevitably end up buying other things that yield profit. Perhaps I should do a picture-packed comparison article for CC?....
My pocket camera takes digital video, so I'll try to upload some footage of feeding time for your entertainment
Joseph, well, everything's relative, right? And so I'd have to say that the
C. ensicauda response is far from unenthusiastic, though it's not nearly as frenzied as with
C. pyrrhogaster. And it's not only me, this has also been pointed out to me recently by Japan's top authority on
Cynops pyrrhogaster. Nice to hear your observations on
C. orientalis. I'm just about to get more into this species...
My
pyrrhogaster are fed bloodworm on average once every two days, though often daily. Too bad they don't show as much interest in the salmon pellets that Jen and Michael have championed. Maybe it's an acquired taste...
(Message edited by TJ on March 18, 2006)