T O P I C R E V I E W |
boost-boy74 |
Posted - 10/06/2010 : 14:55:53 hi,
i have a 3ft viv which im planning to use for my corn when i get one. the viv had lizards in before but it has a flurocesnt tube in the top right hand corner, fitting tight to the roof of the viv, will this be ok or would a corn break it etc
cheers simon |
9 L A T E S T R E P L I E S (Newest First) |
boost-boy74 |
Posted - 11/06/2010 : 12:44:55 Thats cool then - thankyou |
matty18714 |
Posted - 11/06/2010 : 11:43:40 As long as there is enough light for the snake to tell the differance between day and night it will be fine. |
boost-boy74 |
Posted - 11/06/2010 : 09:33:08 hi,
thanks for all the info and advice, i think i will remove the tubes...so they will be fine in my reproom as there are no windows? they would get light from the room light and a few other vivs i have in there - is that ok? |
LittleMick |
Posted - 10/06/2010 : 22:30:00 I think the idea that snakes get heat from their bellies is the fact that the ventral side of a snake is the most sensitive part as this si one of their sense, so as well as eyes and scent they ue the bellies to sense vibrations. So, that being said, it might make sense for the snake to use a surface that it's belly is in contact with. I've often read and seen documentaries where snakes bask on roads, rather than on say grass. But then on the other side of that, corn snakes are semi arboreal and like handing about on low level branches or dead wood, or at the edge of fields/clearings. As Matty said, there is no fact either way really. Snake eyeight varies from snake to snake, but it has been suggested that it ranges from seeing only the difference between light and dark, and binocular vision. And also that terrestial or burrowing snakes have the poorer eyesight, and the arboreal species have the more accurate eyesight. I swear we had a topic on this on here somewhere. |
matty18714 |
Posted - 10/06/2010 : 20:20:06 quote: Originally posted by hillzi
For practically, corn's get heat from their bellies in the ideal world, which a £13 heatmat and a £25 stat do, rather than a £8 bulb, £20-25 guard, and a £40 stat, not to mention the bulb holder and three core cable etc etc.
Another example of something I have yet to see proof for. A lot of people seem to say that corns get heat from underneath (some even say they prefer it), its rubbish. Even if it was true, bulbs heat the floor of the viv and provide ambient heat, which a mat wont do.
Also were talking aesthetic light, not heat light. |
hillzi |
Posted - 10/06/2010 : 20:13:51 quote: Originally posted by matty18714
Often people say tubes flickering will anoy a snake. As far as I know there is no evidence to suggest they can see it at all, and as their sight is supposedly worse than ours, I really doubt they can.
completely agree, but theres also no evidence to say they can't see it, so I don't do lights at all.
For practically, corn's get heat from their bellies in the ideal world, which a £13 heatmat and a £25 stat do, rather than a £8 bulb, £20-25 guard, and a £40 stat, not to mention the bulb holder and three core cable etc etc.
corn's are mainly crespecular meaning active at dawn/dusk, and their acceptable light levels are fine within the viv room regarding lights aren't left on all day and all night.. |
matty18714 |
Posted - 10/06/2010 : 19:38:08 Often people say tubes flickering will anoy a snake. As far as I know there is no evidence to suggest they can see it at all, and as their sight is supposedly worse than ours, I really doubt they can. |
elament |
Posted - 10/06/2010 : 18:56:28 I also have read that the flickering light dont do them any good. Plus them tubes incredibly easy to crush so therefore dangerous. I'd get rid. |
DannyBrown91 |
Posted - 10/06/2010 : 15:09:47 If it was left in it would need to be guarded otherwise a corn could burn himself or he could inceed smash it when climbing.
Corns don't need a light so it may be easier to just take it out.
I think i may have also read that these lights flicker on a level that we can't see, but can cause corns to become stressed. |
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