jtrux said:Its odd about the babcocki's, ive noticed on virtually every one ive seen that has been kept humid and so forth tends to have the scutes just slightly raised with the new growth being smooth. I know mine is like as well as many others. Either its a babcocki thing or we still havent figured out the other piece of the puzzle. We always discuss how babies likely spend the first parts of there lives in small burrows that are humid and damp, well maybe the diet is drastically different during that part of there lives as well. For all we know they are down there eating worms and bugs or plant roots, who knows, maybe well never know.
I think this is because the majority of breeders "out there" start them too dry. Pyramiding can start, or NOT start, literally the day they hatch. Even if you get one that is only two weeks old, that is enough time to cause that initial rise you speak of, and establish the beginning of a pattern for future pyramiding. Any leopards that I have hatched and started myself, did NOT have that initial rise, but when ever I see tiny hatchlings, still with an egg tooth, at a reptile show, on rabbit pellets or some other dry substrate, they ALL have that initial notch around each scute. I hatched some leopard eggs for a friend a couple of years ago. I posted pics several times here on the forum, but I have no idea where to even look for them now.
I also agree that a tortoise that is 90% smooth, and has been fed well and sunned often, is just fine. Minor pyramiding is just cosmetic in my opinion, but I still want to strive for improvement.