rcpreis3
See me as a court jester
I never went through the set up of doing the live anole feeders, it was a great idea, but I couldnt get the space to pull it all together.
Why are u acting like this is a bad guy thread?
So that means that Rodentpros feeders have parasites and they are selling these animals as clean, safe feeders.
Like I said I should have worded that better and I did apologize, If u like and would let me Id go back and edit it. Id change it something like, "Based on what information I have it seems Rodentpros feeders have... etc."
Why are u acting like this is a bad guy thread? And like I said before, I have snakes in my collection that eat f/t, never had a live rat from me, and still have worms. So that pretty much knocks out my live provider as a suspect. I said right in my first post that im waiting for tests and that people should be careful until I have results.
Better safe than sorry.
You have no information. You have a situation, and a theory.
All people are saying here is that perhaps you should not have called a company's name here before being sure. If it turns out that your statement was not true, they could look to you for any losses in sales stemming from your announcement.
I'm "acting like this ios a bad guy thread" because you, regardless of what cute little icon you used, and without a shred of proof, have accused RodentPro of contaminating your collection with some unknown parasite. That is pretty much the definition of a bad guy thread.
So am I supposed to say, "hey I cant tell u what company but my frozen feeders might have pinworms and u should watch out if u buy frozen feeders from a company I cant tell u I use"
Just for the record they arent unknown, they are pinworms.
garweft said:So what did you take to get looked at buy the vet? The snake or just the worms in the water? Did the vet do an actual fecal or what? if so do you have the results to post?
So am I supposed to say, "hey I cant tell u what company but my frozen feeders might have pinworms and u should watch out if u buy frozen feeders from a company I cant tell u I use"
Just for the record they arent unknown, they are pinworms.
I would like to state that before I went with Rodent pro I never once saw a parasite in my collection. Then a few months after I start to order from them I had lil worms floating in water dishes. I thought it was from a recent trade and that I just didnt quarantine that guy long/good enough, but after I take these snakes to the vet and get them checked out, the doc says these worms cannot be contracted through the vent of the snake, but only from the prey. Being inside the prey is a necessary step in the development and cannot be skipped. I believe she said they were Pinworms, or trachylides (sp)? So that means that Rodentpros feeders have parasites and they are selling these animals as clean, safe feeders. I will be taking some of these rats/mice of various ages and bring them to her for a fecal exam. We just have to wait until I get paid again or if I have enough after I get the necessary medication to clean my collection. I put this out there as an info thread so that people can not only hold off feeding these rats to their animals, but if they were curious enough themselves to take them to their vet and get them checked out for a second opinion. I will update this thread after we get the fecal smears on the rats done.
Had you picked up the phone and called this company, a company of their size and reputation would have, I think, immediately tested their critters and gotten back to you.
They don't have to wait for vet appointments, for important matters I'm sure they can have a vet come to them.
I'm not saying there is or there is not a connection, let me be very clear on that.
I AM saying that prior to making your initial statement saying this company was responsible, more should have been done.
Did you even try to call them?
with everything except the bolded part. It takes days for the natural occuring bugs to go haywire when the "system of checks and balance" go off.Pinworms are NATURAL in the gut flora of reptiles and amphibians. The reptiles do NOT have to become infected through their food to get them - all they have to do is eat/drink something that is contaminated with eggs. Eggs can spread through physical contact - so you yourself could have potentially spread eggs from some other source to your snake's foods or their water dish. Crickets for example are notorious for passing pinworms from animal to animal... so if you have cricket eating animals and those crickets manage to go on a walkabout from a cage that has an animal heavily infected (infected to the point of passing eggs in the first place) to other cages or to nearby supplies that you put into other cages - they have then passed the pinworms through their contamination of those cages/items. People that use bark/dirt/etc. type substrates in their cages open themselves up to potential contamination as well...eggs are perfectly happy to sit in the dirt, etc. for a long time in stasis waiting for the chance to find its way inside an animal that is eating a food item that came in contact with the contaminated substrate.
Also, if you are going to blame RodentPro for the "infection" then think on this. As said before Pinworms are a natural part of the gut flora of herps. They do NOT pose a problem UNLESS the animal itself is already compromised health wise. A normal healthy animal's immune system keeps the pinworms in check. It's when the animal is sick from some other cause and their immune system becomes compromised that the worms are able to get out of control and cause possible problems like impaction. If a HEALTHY animal is passing visible worms - visible to your eyes, then your "problem" existed far longer than the "couple of months" you were feeding your snakes from rodentpro's stock. It takes a long time for a worm population to grow so out of control that the worms themselves are being passed in stool or water dishes and can be seen without the benefit of a microscope.
And again I ask....
Pinworms are NATURAL in the gut flora of reptiles and amphibians. The reptiles do NOT have to become infected through their food to get them - all they have to do is eat/drink something that is contaminated with eggs. Eggs can spread through physical contact - so you yourself could have potentially spread eggs from some other source to your snake's foods or their water dish. Crickets for example are notorious for passing pinworms from animal to animal... so if you have cricket eating animals and those crickets manage to go on a walkabout from a cage that has an animal heavily infected (infected to the point of passing eggs in the first place) to other cages or to nearby supplies that you put into other cages - they have then passed the pinworms through their contamination of those cages/items. People that use bark/dirt/etc. type substrates in their cages open themselves up to potential contamination as well...eggs are perfectly happy to sit in the dirt, etc. for a long time in stasis waiting for the chance to find its way inside an animal that is eating a food item that came in contact with the contaminated substrate.
Also, if you are going to blame RodentPro for the "infection" then think on this. As said before Pinworms are a natural part of the gut flora of herps. They do NOT pose a problem UNLESS the animal itself is already compromised health wise. A normal healthy animal's immune system keeps the pinworms in check. It's when the animal is sick from some other cause and their immune system becomes compromised that the worms are able to get out of control and cause possible problems like impaction. If a HEALTHY animal is passing visible worms - visible to your eyes, then your "problem" existed far longer than the "couple of months" you were feeding your snakes from rodentpro's stock. It takes a long time for a worm population to grow so out of control that the worms themselves are being passed in stool or water dishes and can be seen without the benefit of a microscope.
Just for the record, pinworms are found in many different species, including humans. Before accusing RodentPro or anybody else without proof, you need to do more inverstigating. The pinworms could have come from you handling live rodents and transferring the eggs to your reptiles. The fact that you didn't feed any particular animal live rodents is no proof. A live rodent that is infected will have eggs on and around its anus, and those eggs can spread to you hand, and then to your snakes habitat and water bowl. My entire point is that you are premature and have shown ZERO PROOF that RodentPro has anything to do with your pinworm infestation.
Why are u acting like this is a bad guy thread?
And like I said before, I have snakes in my collection that eat f/t, never had a live rat from me, and still have worms. So that pretty much knocks out my live provider as a suspect.
wow really? You wash your hands and sanitize after each and every sing rat you handle? WOW. Are your hands raw? Please tell me you only have like two reptiles. Because if you don't, that sure is a lot of hand washings. Then again you know how people are. They clean and disinfect their hands after each snake (which is believable). the also clean and disinfect their hands after every rat. they also clean and disinfect their hands after every third step. But only if it is on the left foot and on Wednesdays. These same people were lab coats and gas masks just to feed their reptiles. They make people wear bio level safety 4 suits before entering their house as well.I practice pretty good sanitation when handling my reptiles, when I feed I wash my hands and sanitize between each feed and when I clean I wear gloves. .
I would like to state that before I went with Rodent pro I never once saw a parasite in my collection. Then a few months after I start to order from them I had lil worms floating in water dishes..
Your timeline. something is off. Not sure what. But something in your time line is not right.And Ive been using Rodentpro for probably a year now. What is the exact amount of time for a pinworms life cycle?
Mouse/rat pinworm will NOT cause disease in reptiles.