You could also start a white worm culture or get black worms. They're much smaller than earthworms but not as good nutritionally. They love eating them at this age because they're alive and will have that satisfying wiggle until you teach them to eat dead food. They will grow much faster on these than they will on just fruit flies. Until mine got a little bigger I fed them on white and black worms and kept fruit flies in their enclosure for free range snacking. Your newt is very cute.Just feed flightless fruit flies. You can get these at Petco and petsmart. When they get older then pinheaded crickets which may be harder to find.
My baby T. Sierrae is pounding down the fruitflys.
Mine won't eat flightless fruit flies, on the rare occasions that he does try to eat them he usually misses and eats nearby dirt instead. He's big enough by now to eat most earthworms.Just feed flightless fruit flies. You can get these at Petco and petsmart. When they get older then pinheaded crickets which may be harder to find.
My baby T. Sierrae is pounding down the fruitflys.
I keep my sierra newt on damp natural paper towels (no bleach / chemicals) in a semi large container with a lid. It allows me to see the flies and monitor how much he eats and craps and allows me to give it a 100% clean enclosure once or twice a week with a paper towel change. When he/she gets larger, I may move it to a more naturalistic aquarium. I don't have a source for worms.Mine won't eat flightless fruit flies, on the rare occasions that he does try to eat them he usually misses and eats nearby dirt instead. He's big enough by now to eat most earthworms.
I have mine on some zoo med creatures soil with moss, springtails and small soil insects, and small earthworms. I set it up like this so that he could hunt his own food since the worms do explore around the enclosure pretty often at night, I figured it'd make a good emergency food supply if for some reason I was unavailable to feed him. Also he likes to hide under the moss more than any of the other three hides of varying sizes that I've tried to give him. Newts produce a surprising amount of waste, which I hope by now the moss and detritivores have grown to take care of but your setup does sound more hygenic.I keep my sierra newt on damp natural paper towels (no bleach / chemicals) in a semi large container with a lid. It allows me to see the flies and monitor how much he eats and craps and allows me to give it a 100% clean enclosure once or twice a week with a paper towel change. When he/she gets larger, I may move it to a more naturalistic aquarium. I don't have a source for worms.
This newt was pulled out of someone's swimming pool in Placer County by my pool guy and was told he left me another one now which ill see in a week when we go back to our place there.