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Unexpected twins

Lee’s first view of the two snakes.
All photos courtesy Dean Reddy.

Snake-breeder Dean Reddy got more than he bargained for recently, when one of his ball python eggs hatched. Inside, there was not just one, but two toffino hatchlings. Dean, who has a mixed collection although he concentrates on ball pythons, wasn’t really that focussed on breeding his snakes this year, having recently moved and been busy doing up his new house.

Anyway, he had bought a spider het toffee male, which, displaying a not uncommon ball python behaviour, went on hunger strike - but in this case, it extended for an ultimately worrying nine months. Finally, this snake started eating again at the beginning of 2020, and so Dean paired him up with an albino female in his collection.

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Practical Reptile Keeping
Issue 131
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Andere Artikel in dieser Ausgabe


Practical Reptile Keeping
Welcome
As the challenge of coronavirus continues to play out
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Featuring stories about the rare hatching of twin snakes by a UK breeder, unexpected sea turtle breeding patterns this year, new insights into the development of the crocodile lineage, beetles that cultivate fungus as food, an overlooked pterodactyl, a South America frog which may have been successfully rescued from the brink of extinction and more, starting here with the remarkable rediscovery of a chameleon that hadn’t been sighted officially for over a century.
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Fossils of bizarre, armoured amphibians known as albanerpetontids
REPTILE FOCUS
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Could pterosaurs (also known as pterodactyls) - flying reptiles that lived at the time of the dinosaurs - still exist? Dr Karl Shuker focuses on some interesting reports from the Americas and Australasia.
YOU & YOUR Reptiles
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John Courteney-Smith MRSB looks at recent advances
News & Views
Amazing beetles
Ambrosia beetles belong to the bark beetle family
NEW PTEROSAUR FOUND
Palaeontologists have made an amazing discovery while
How amphibians breathe
There’s a key thing that links virtually all living organisms on Earth, and that is the need for oxygen. However, while in many animals, absorbing it into their bodies is a simple process, the same cannot be said for the amphibians, which have therefore evolved some rather intriguing ways of breathing. Paul Donovan reports.
Lighting concerns
Email your queries to practicalreptilekeeping@gmail.com.
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Considerable research has been carried out into maintaining the health of various reptilian body systems, including the respiratory, digestive, metabolic and reproductive systems. Yet the body’s largest and most vitally important organ - providing the front-line in the battle against infection - is often surprisingly overlooked. This is the skin, as Hannah Salisbury MSc BSc (Hons) AnSci explains.
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