I already said i think its necessary and most people are making it as if they cant survive without the UVB bulb. which they can.
nrfitchett4 said:but red foot tortoise get a lot more protein than most other torts right? and with that protein is usually vitamin d. (redfoots are the ones that eat cat food, right?).
So I guess for the starter tort keepers, a uvb bulb would probably be a good investment to keep their torts as healthy as possible. Just make sure they have hides to get out of the "sun".
-EJ said:No... they don't. They get as much animal matter as any tortoise.
nrfitchett4 said:but red foot tortoise get a lot more protein than most other torts right? and with that protein is usually vitamin d. (redfoots are the ones that eat cat food, right?).
So I guess for the starter tort keepers, a uvb bulb would probably be a good investment to keep their torts as healthy as possible. Just make sure they have hides to get out of the "sun".
nrfitchett4 said:-EJ said:No... they don't. They get as much animal matter as any tortoise.
nrfitchett4 said:but red foot tortoise get a lot more protein than most other torts right? and with that protein is usually vitamin d. (redfoots are the ones that eat cat food, right?).
So I guess for the starter tort keepers, a uvb bulb would probably be a good investment to keep their torts as healthy as possible. Just make sure they have hides to get out of the "sun".
So they get as much as by baby sulcata?
nrfitchett4 said:my point being that an exclusively veggie diet doesn't lend itself to much dietary d3 in the wild.
-EJ said:No... they don't. They get as much animal matter as any tortoise.
Millerlite said:UVB is necessary to all reptiles, and its healthy for them, the only thing i argue is, do they need artificial UVB. Like i said before many people dont use the bulbs and have nice looking tortoises. Dont confuse this with never having UVB because most let theres have natural sun.
nrfitchett4 said:Reptiles that are primarily veggie eaters need sunlight/uvb. Iguanas, desert type tort's. There's not much dietary d3 in veggies and from what I've read about iguanas they don't thing that igs can process dietary d3.
-EJ said:Huge... I mean... really huge assumption... misconception.
You really need to to a little more research.
Both of the animals mentioned... do eat carrion and whole critters.
nrfitchett4 said:Reptiles that are primarily veggie eaters need sunlight/uvb. Iguanas, desert type tort's. There's not much dietary d3 in veggies and from what I've read about iguanas they don't thing that igs can process dietary d3.
nrfitchett4 said:I eat mcdonalds. doesn't mean it won't kill me in the long run.
makes me also wonder why the life spans of igs in capitivity used to be shorter than in the wild. Probably nothing to do with all the dog and cat food they were fed (and iceburg lettuce for that matter).