BuffaloTortoise
New member
Hello,
After working with the species for nearly two decades, I'm excited to share that this year finally brought my first successful hatches for the species!
We're making these four well-started Radiateds available to conservation-minded keepers. At least three of these are emerging high-color animals, which I've personally always defined as Radiateds possessing horizontal banding on their costal scutes. The fourth will also very likely develop the same. Two bloodlines are represented in these four.
These have been raised in a humid chamber environment, bathed daily since hatching, and fed a variety of wild greens (dandelion, broadleaf and ribwort plantains, clover, mulberry, rose of sharon [flowers and leaves], grape leaves, birdsfoot trefoil, etc.), supplemented twice weekly with moistened Mazuri Tortoise Food LS.
$2,250 each and available to CBW Permit-holders. If in New York, the CBW is not required; however, keepers will be required to possess the NYS DEC's Endangered/Threatened Species License (application found here) prior to any transfer. Within NY, in-person hand-offs may be made out of either Buffalo or Albany.
Thanks for Looking,
Tony
After working with the species for nearly two decades, I'm excited to share that this year finally brought my first successful hatches for the species!
We're making these four well-started Radiateds available to conservation-minded keepers. At least three of these are emerging high-color animals, which I've personally always defined as Radiateds possessing horizontal banding on their costal scutes. The fourth will also very likely develop the same. Two bloodlines are represented in these four.
These have been raised in a humid chamber environment, bathed daily since hatching, and fed a variety of wild greens (dandelion, broadleaf and ribwort plantains, clover, mulberry, rose of sharon [flowers and leaves], grape leaves, birdsfoot trefoil, etc.), supplemented twice weekly with moistened Mazuri Tortoise Food LS.
$2,250 each and available to CBW Permit-holders. If in New York, the CBW is not required; however, keepers will be required to possess the NYS DEC's Endangered/Threatened Species License (application found here) prior to any transfer. Within NY, in-person hand-offs may be made out of either Buffalo or Albany.
Thanks for Looking,
Tony
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