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Old 03-15-2018, 09:57 AM   #1
gabe86
Question about the repitle egg on embryo

I was told that once the egg lays for a few days( the person did give too much detailed on how many days). When ever someone is trying to dig it up a egg. And you happen to move it that the embryonic cell cluster adjust inside the egg. Is this information true. Has any one experience any positive results?
 
Old 03-16-2018, 01:30 AM   #2
hotlips
If I understand the question you are asking (?)- I only have experience with snake eggs but I suspect this applies to others as well. Once eggs are laid, they should not be moved unless care is taken NOT to turn them at all. (they aren't chickens, lol...) Doing so will cause the eggs to fail.
 
Old 03-16-2018, 11:37 AM   #3
gabe86
Do you always candle your eggs every time you find them ? Do you know how it take for the embryo to die once it is turned?
 
Old 03-16-2018, 06:40 PM   #4
hotlips
Yes, I've always candled eggs when I have bred snakes. But I handled the eggs gently, never turning them, keeping them in the same orientation at all times. No way I can tell you how long before an egg will appear to be non-viable: could be right away or go "full term+" and then either not hatch or be defective. So you're stuck with waiting ...even eggs that were never turned & candle reddish may keep us guessing.

As far as candling, some eggs take a while before they appear to be good, so I always wait for obvious signs of failure before discarding them- signs like oozing slime, moldy, smelling bad- typically draws flies, etc. Good eggs have a reddish glow from the blood vessels inside, & while 'bad eggs' appear straw-yellow inside, keep in mind that not all good eggs look reddish for a week or more after they're laid.

One more thing- most people prefer to stay on the safe side & never separate their eggs to incubate them. It's more work (tedious would be the right word!) to separate them but it's how I've usually done it, so that when one or more eggs go bad, they don't adversely affect the other good eggs they may be stuck to. As already mentioned, bad eggs draw flies which brings maggots which definitely don't differentiate between good & bad eggs.

But in order to separate a clump of eggs that are stuck together, you need PATIENCE: One at a time, I use my finger or an eye dropper to put a drop of water on the place where 2 of the eggs are stuck together. You can only work on those 2 at a time, ALWAYS keeping ALL the eggs oriented the same way. It's not easy, especially with a large clutch, but my hatch rates were just fine. Anyway, that drop of water softens the stuck part as you barely roll the eggs back & forth, until that spot loosens & lets go without tearing either egg. Then repeat the process until all eggs are free of each other. I mention this not because you necessarily want to try it, but just to let you know that "some handling" of the eggs will not harm them. But turning them causes the blood supply network to disconnect & then fail. I hope that makes sense?
 
Old 03-16-2018, 06:48 PM   #5
hotlips
BTW: never spray the eggs with water to moisten them...you have to be very careful when using the drip of water to separate eggs, because coating them with water can drown them, even just a light spray. I've always incubated eggs in moist vermiculite, planted about 2/3 into it, top third above for good air exchange. If the vermiculite seems to get too dry, carefully add water between the eggs, never on them. And you want the eggs + vermiculite in a container covered with plastic wrap (held on with tape or large rubber band): poke a few pin-holes in the plastic for breathing. Make sure you don't get excessive condensation on the plastic...it can drip on & drown the eggs! Also make sure the container is tall enough so the plastic doesn't touch (droop onto) the eggs.
 

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