Maybe @Littleredfootbigredheart or someone they know on this forum could help?Hi friends!
Is my redfoot pyramiding? Why these scute lines are 'ups and downs', so rough.
He is 8 months, 170g, 9.5cm length. He is in a 200L fish tank with closed cover. Temperature is between 26-29, humidity is 85-90.
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I think maybe cause of temperature and humidity unstable.I can definitely tag these guys to have a look, they’re the red experts@ZEROPILOT @Anyfoot
In my(less experienced) opinion, it might be tricky to say with absolute certainty at this stage, one thing I will say is I’ve noticed red foot’s growth ridges tend to be a little more pronounced, which when smaller I think can sometimes give the illusion of the beginning stages of pyramiding. Now obviously I can’t say for sure this isn’t the start of some, but if you’re maintaining your humidity around 85-90, I’d be surprised![]()
yeah your further information definitely makes sense as to why his growth might not be the smoothest. Keep humidity 80+, growth should be smoother moving forward, keep temps in the 82-86f range, your current temps sound pretty spot on now so that’s good!, what kind of bulbs do you use? Just ceramic? Don’t suppose you have a photo of your set up?I think maybe cause of temperature and humidity unstable.
In October, the temperature dropped to 23-25 Celsius, I didn't turn on the ceramic emitter, that time he ate less than usual.
In November, i turn on the ceramic emitter, the temperature raised to 28-31 Celsius, he ate a lot, the tank wasn't 100% closed(I thought 100% closed can't provide enough oxygen) , so the humidity was around 60-70%. And he always stayed under the ceramic lamp, that was too hot and too dry.
From December, i use a temperature control to keep the temperature around 27 Celsius and tank is 100% closed, so the humidity is around 90%.
Maybe it’s because the environment has changed so much in the past 3 months, and his growth rate changed so much make the ridges not smooth.
Hi!Hi friends!
Is my redfoot pyramiding? Why these scute lines are 'ups and downs', so rough.
He is 8 months, 170g, 9.5cm length. He is in a 200L fish tank with closed cover. Temperature is between 26-29, humidity is 85-90.
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I May be wrong but I seem to remember you mentioned something about getting some Redfoots a few yrs back. Did that ever happen or am I wrong?I agree with the other posters. This tortoise is not pyramiding yet, and the growth lines are easily explained by the changes conditions so far.
I would add: 200L is too small. Time for a larger enclosure. It should be a closed chamber. 122x61cm is the minus to start a baby tortoise, and by 170 grams, it is time for something larger than that. I recommend at least 122x244cm as a good size to grow out a tortoise. Once it outgrows that, you'll have to figure out what works in your climate and housing situation.
Ideally the temperature should stay between 27 and 30C all the time. Excessive basking under a CHE or heat lamp WILL eventually cause pyramiding. If you see the tortoise basking a lot, that is an indication that ambient temperature should be warmed up a bit.
Frequent shell spraying with demineralized water, like distilled, RO, or collected rainwater, will also help prevent pyramiding and work well with this species. Don't use demineralized water for drinking or soaking. Use regal water for that. Also be careful that you aren't keeping the substrate too wet too much of the time, as they are prone to shell rot on the plastron in wet conditions. Ideally, the surface layer of substrate can be dry, humidity high, and regular spraying of just the carapace will work wonders. These conditions are easy to achieve in a large closed chamber with thermostatically controlled heat sources.
No. My climate isn't right for them. Too hot in summer, too cold in winter, too dry all the time. This is why I don't keep Indotestudo or Manouria either.I May be wrong but I seem to remember you mentioned something about getting some Redfoots a few yrs back. Did that ever happen or am I wrong?






Thank you for your reply, this is just a mini LED for more brightness.Hello!
Thank you for the update! As far as I can tell - new growth is pretty smooth.
I don't think pellets are the culprit here. Yet, try to keep amount of animal protein at 10-15% of overall diet.
What's the lamp over the watet dish? A halogen or just a LED for more brightness?
Yes it was a coil UVB, i have changed it to a T5 tube UVB.Is that a coil UVB bulb in the middle?
Oh sorry, I now realize I didn't read your post properlyYes it was a coil UVB, i have changed it to a T5 tube UVB.
I’d be pretty proud of that growth for a captive red foot, you’re doing a good job! I agree with Alex, I don’t think it’s diet related, but definitely reduce the pellets, main bulk of diet should be weeds, greens, some fruit(you can play around with the ratios), and just a weekly bit of protein. I wouldn’t bother with grasses, they don’t really eat it unless having a munch on it outsideUpdate:
It’s been half a year since my last post. Unfortunately, my redfoot have showed pyramiding.
Since my last post, I've made a new enclosure for him. 180cm*80cm*50cm. The humidity is always 90+ and keep the temperature between 26-30 degrees Celsius. So, now i think the main reason of pyramiding is that i feed too much pallets(70% of the diet). This pallet contain animal based protein.
So I think he get too much nutrition without getting enough exercise.
I will feed him mainly vegetables and grass for now. This is my first redfoot and my first tortoise, i really hope he can grow up healthily.
Here some photos(plz ignore the spiral uvb bulb, i have changed it to T5 tube)
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Thank you ~I’d be pretty proud of that growth for a captive red foot, you’re doing a good job! I agree with Alex, I don’t think it’s diet related, but definitely reduce the pellets, main bulk of diet should be weeds, greens, some fruit(you can play around with the ratios), and just a weekly bit of protein. I wouldn’t bother with grasses, they don’t really eat it unless having a munch on it outside![]()