Hey guys I have two Axoltols one of them came in with a broken arm. I hoped that it would continue to grow and correct itself, but has not and is continuing to grow in the wrong direction. Any advice on what I should do?
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Poor guy. This guy will go through stages before becoming a salamander and if it doesnt grow correctly now, it likely wont as it transitions. It will however function normally without the leg.Hey guys I have two Axoltols one of them came in with a broken arm. I hoped that it would continue to grow and correct itself, but has not and is continuing to grow in the wrong direction. Any advice on what I should do?![]()
these guys are super cool! I hope he recoversI haven’t worked with these for many years. Are you keeping them together? They often bite each others legs. What temperature are you housing them at? Many people keep them too warm. Does their diet have enough calcium in it?Hey guys I have two Axoltols one of them came in with a broken arm. I hoped that it would continue to grow and correct itself, but has not and is continuing to grow in the wrong direction. Any advice on what I should do?![]()
They do have that ability, (mostly for toes that I’ve seen) but I hesitated suggesting that because of infection risk and if the diet isn’t really good, it will regrow worse than it already is.Poor guy.
Shouldn’t they have the ability to regenerate complete limbs?
I don’t know what would be the trigger for doing it - but maybe the existence of the current one prevents it from growing a new one from scratch? I’m sure there’s some info about it.
Note that I’ve never kept one of these, but I’ve read about them in the past just from curiosity.
Good point, thank you for clarifying it.They do have that ability, (mostly for toes that I’ve seen) but I hesitated suggesting that because of infection risk and if the diet isn’t really good, it will regrow worse than it already is.
I Have two babies together one of them bit the tail of the other when I first put them together, but then they never bit eachother again. I house them at 68 degrees in ro water so the water is more acidic since most breeders keep them at that ph. Diet I feed them blood worms since they are not big enough to feed frozen fish yet. It seemed like he got injured in transport I just didn’t know if there was anyway to help him as in continue to let it grow, or even cut it off since they regenerate body partsI haven’t worked with these for many years. Are you keeping them together? They often bite each others legs. What temperature are you housing them at? Many people keep them too warm. Does their diet have enough calcium in it?
Jay
They regenerate body parts and I have surgical scissors to perform it my question is how should I approach this to minimize infection and aid recovery. Hospital tank? Fridge him?Poor guy.
Shouldn’t they have the ability to regenerate complete limbs?
I don’t know what would be the trigger for doing it - but maybe the existence of the current one prevents it from growing a new one from scratch? I’m sure there’s some info about it.
Note that I’ve never kept one of these, but I’ve read about them in the past just from curiosity.
That’s what I assumed so you think that I should leave it be he has been eating and swimming fine for a while nowThey do have that ability, (mostly for toes that I’ve seen) but I hesitated suggesting that because of infection risk and if the diet isn’t really good, it will regrow worse than it already is.
Axolotls don't become a salamander or transition into anything else.Poor guy. This guy will go through stages before becoming a salamander and if it doesnt grow correctly now, it likely wont as it transitions.
I would let this adult Axolotl respond to your statement:Axolotls don't become a salamander or transition into anything else.
Then it was either given hormones, or that's a tiger salamander rather than an Axolotl.I would let this adult Axolotl respond to your statement:
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P.S: Just a random pic from google, not mine.
I’m sorry, I wish I knew better and could help more.They regenerate body parts and I have surgical scissors to perform it my question is how should I approach this to minimize infection and aid recovery. Hospital tank? Fridge him?
Axolotls normally don't morph into terrestrial form. They're neotenous, and typically stay in this baby form, including breeding.Poor guy. This guy will go through stages before becoming a salamander and if it doesnt grow correctly now, it likely wont as it transitions. It will however function normally without the leg.
Feeding is easy and getting foods often from bait shop such as mealworms, earthworms, blackworms, brine shrimp, and small mystery snails.
They /can/ morph into a terrestrial form, but it's very unusual, and often not good for their health- their skin stays quite fragile, as they're a species that's evolved to normally stay in what is essentially tadpole form. Hormones are a common way of triggering the change, but it can, rarely, happen on its own- likely due to a hormone issue caused by the axolotl's own body rather than an artificially induced one.Axolotls don't become a salamander or transition into anything else.
Admittedly I don’t know if this particular one was injected or not.Then it was either given hormones, or that's a tiger salamander rather than an Axolotl.
Hormones are a common way of triggering the change, but it can, rarely, happen on its own- likely due to a hormone issue caused by the axolotl's own body rather than an artificially induced one.
Sure, and there's a stuffed calf in my local museum with 2 heads. Happened naturally.Regardless if it is natural or not - they do have an adult form and can transition to it.
Your first comment seemed like you genuinely didn't know an adult form exist, so I tried to let you know in what I thought was a funny way to pass it through.Sure, and there's a stuffed calf in my local museum with 2 heads. Happened naturally.
No worries. It's a cute pic for sure. And my last response was pretty snarky.Your first comment seemed like you genuinely didn't know an adult form exist, so I tried to let you know in what I thought was a funny way to pass it through.
I apologize if it seemed like I'm trying to make fun of you, it wasn't my intention.
I don't think an axolotl keeper should be under the impression that his/her pet will transition. If it did, it would be a 'standard' species of salamander. This is what makes an axolotl an axolotl. They reach adulthood without undergoing metamorphosis, keeping their gills.Right, but that /is/ possible. It doesn't happen commonly enough that any lotl keeper should expect it to happen, but it's not impossible.

