If you shoot a temperature gun at your torts carapace while its lying under a CHE, how hot would you expect it to read? (specifically for Red foots?)
Balboa said:your ambient/air temps sound good, but I must admit your surface temp readings sound high. Mine usually measure 100 degrees or so. 120 is getting dangerously close to damage level. (Studies have found that bone starts to die at 122 degrees fahrenheit).
Do you have a rock or tile for your tortoises to bask on? This is important as it stores up heat, so while they bask they are heated from the top and bottom.
EricIvins said:Balboa said:your ambient/air temps sound good, but I must admit your surface temp readings sound high. Mine usually measure 100 degrees or so. 120 is getting dangerously close to damage level. (Studies have found that bone starts to die at 122 degrees fahrenheit).
Do you have a rock or tile for your tortoises to bask on? This is important as it stores up heat, so while they bask they are heated from the top and bottom.
Doesn't sound high at all........Even if it's 65 degrees ambient temp and the Tortoises are out basking, their surface temps are usually right around 100 degrees......When it's warmer, the surface temperatures are going to be hotter......It isn't uncommon to get a range between 120 and 140 degrees as a surface temperature........
These are Ectotherms, who untilize heat energy in a way that's foreign to anything warm blooded......That's why you give the animal the option to thermoregulate and do what it needs to do.......
Balboa said:EricIvins said:Balboa said:your ambient/air temps sound good, but I must admit your surface temp readings sound high. Mine usually measure 100 degrees or so. 120 is getting dangerously close to damage level. (Studies have found that bone starts to die at 122 degrees fahrenheit).
Do you have a rock or tile for your tortoises to bask on? This is important as it stores up heat, so while they bask they are heated from the top and bottom.
Doesn't sound high at all........Even if it's 65 degrees ambient temp and the Tortoises are out basking, their surface temps are usually right around 100 degrees......When it's warmer, the surface temperatures are going to be hotter......It isn't uncommon to get a range between 120 and 140 degrees as a surface temperature........
These are Ectotherms, who untilize heat energy in a way that's foreign to anything warm blooded......That's why you give the animal the option to thermoregulate and do what it needs to do.......
You've recorded 140 degrees surface temps on redfoots with full access to micro-climates to allow thermoregulation?
wildponey21 said:so 120 to140 is ok for redfoots