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And I echo GB...some people just don't get it so I look at it as their loss!! They'll never know what it's like to have such a fun creature under your care & how rewarding it can be!!!
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mlakers wrote:Thank you, Fledgling. Feeling a bit more optimistic today.
i find #3 very interesting. could this be the nature's way of wade out the weaklings? could hermit crab in the wild experience similar population crash in this stage? only those could figure out how to get out of this "trap" gets to live? so they are better prepared for future molt?mlakers wrote:DAY TWELVE.
#3. Lots of what I was seeing was sheds, either stage five or six.
Many had entered stage five, but probably not all, and sheds create lots of waste. I stayed on top of it the day before, but didn't keep in mind that it might take the whole lot of them two days. I should have done some extra water changes. It's also possible that many of the deaths may have been stage six sheds. That's coming fast, but it would help to explain why I wasn't seeing as many clear bodies. Stage six is when the front legs really make a big appearance, including the claws. There have been a ton of sheds today, too, and many of them look strange--like a a normal tail with a huge front half that includes the shed swirling around the body. So it's possible they have been trying to enter stage six but that molt is a really tricky one with all of the major changes involved. They might be getting "trapped" in their own exoskeletons and drowning.