its kinda funny that i bring this up, because i hear and see this being said or brought up all of the time in our hobby. usally with no real basis for the comment, other than to say your T looks fat. so i guess I'm just trying to understand what the precedence is or if there is one for overfeeding a T
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an example: I've talked to a few people who have witnessed and documented prey items taken by wild tropical T's and they found with these tropical T's(ones found in rainforest's of some kind)....the frequency at with they consume food is much greater... if not is more of a frequent occurrence, then we would expect for wild T's... mostly because they are surrounded by a large number of readily available prey items(such as vertebrate type food). as opposed to locally found desert species, which might come across prey only a very limited number of times...so would this make the frequency at which T's consume prey a locale trigger, as opposed to a genetic one??? or would feedings be more species specific?? so being that most T's are opportunistic by nature anyway... its kinda hard for me to belive we actually can over feed a t.....I'm not saying it isn't possible but there does come a time when even my T's will refuse food...so this i guess brings me to my question.."what constitutes overfeeding???"
one can almost conclude that size of prey most determines frequency of feeding(IE a mouse or frog or lizard)...but is feeding an adult T, 1-2 crix's a week over feeding??? or a large roach once a week??? just trying to see what the consensus is out there.....thanks for the input
wayne

an example: I've talked to a few people who have witnessed and documented prey items taken by wild tropical T's and they found with these tropical T's(ones found in rainforest's of some kind)....the frequency at with they consume food is much greater... if not is more of a frequent occurrence, then we would expect for wild T's... mostly because they are surrounded by a large number of readily available prey items(such as vertebrate type food). as opposed to locally found desert species, which might come across prey only a very limited number of times...so would this make the frequency at which T's consume prey a locale trigger, as opposed to a genetic one??? or would feedings be more species specific?? so being that most T's are opportunistic by nature anyway... its kinda hard for me to belive we actually can over feed a t.....I'm not saying it isn't possible but there does come a time when even my T's will refuse food...so this i guess brings me to my question.."what constitutes overfeeding???"
one can almost conclude that size of prey most determines frequency of feeding(IE a mouse or frog or lizard)...but is feeding an adult T, 1-2 crix's a week over feeding??? or a large roach once a week??? just trying to see what the consensus is out there.....thanks for the input
wayne
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