How to Make a Tank for Fire Belly Newts

Thứ bảy - 27/04/2024 01:13
Fire-bellied newts are small amphibians that make great pets and are a wise choice for first-time amphibian owners. Before you get a newt to keep as a pet, educate yourself on their lifestyle and habits and prepare an appropriate habitat...
Table of contents

Fire-bellied newts are small amphibians that make great pets and are a wise choice for first-time amphibian owners. Before you get a newt to keep as a pet, educate yourself on their lifestyle and habits and prepare an appropriate habitat to ensure that your newt will live a long and happy life.

Part 1
Part 1 of 3:

Planning Your Tank

  1. Step 1 Learn about newts.
    The type of tank that any reptile or amphibian pet needs depends on several factors that vary by species, including:
    • The size of an adult. An adult fire-bellied newt is approximately 4-6 inches long; sometimes pet stores carry juveniles as small as two inches long.[1]
    • Its habitat in the wild. Fire-bellied newts originate in Japan, where they are semi-aquatic and spend most of their time in clear, cool bodies of water like lakes, ponds, and streams.[2] This means that pet newts need a home that has water to swim in but also some areas of land; a good rule of thumb is to divide its home with 70% being water and 30% dry land.[3]
    • Its habits. Newts are amphibians, so they go through metamorphosis from a tadpole, to larva, to fully developed adult. They spend the first part of their life in water, and as adults spend time on land and in the water. Older fire-belly newts are more aquatic and are generally easier to keep as pets.[4] They can live up to thirty years with excellent care; most live to be about fifteen.[5]
    • Its diet. Newts in the wild are carnivorous and like a diet of insects, but you can also feed them dried reptile or amphibian food such as Reptomin Floating Food Sticks.[6] While it's fine to feed them primarily dried food, they need a varied diet including live food such as bloodworms, blackworms, guppies, and crickets; this keeps them active and alert since they have to "hunt," and also helps to ensure they get the proper nutrition. Before you purchase newts, be sure that you have a local store or source to regularly purchase these insects. You must also be sure you'll be comfortable keeping such food available for the newts and feeding live food to them.[7]
  2. Advertisement
Part 2
Part 2 of 3:

Preparing and Buying Supplies

  1. Advertisement
Part 3
Part 3 of 3:

Caring for Your Newt

  1. Advertisement

Things You'll Need

  • 10-20 gallon aquarium or terrarium tank with tight lid
  • pH testing kit
  • ammonia testing kit
  • water dechlorinator
  • pebbles, floating cork, turtle platform, or live plants to crawl on
  • dry and live newt food (amphibian food sticks, bloodworms, crickets, etc.)
  • a hiding place (pot, plants, cork, etc.)
  • newts

Total notes of this article: 0 in 0 rating

Click on stars to rate this article