Originally posted by: Bluefront
Any kind of natural floor material will eventually get some bugs in it. You just have to change it at regular intervals. Have the snake checked for mites at the vet. Little bugs in a water bowl don't sound like mites to me.
OK, sorry I couldn't reply earlier. Was working both jobs today...but hey; better late than never!
Snakes can most certainly get mites. My Brazilian has never had them, but my Royal Python has. Back in my beginning days of snake ownership I didn't know what to do or even how to identify them either.
Mites are the most evil things God ever created. If you think it's hard to get rid of a psycho ex-girlfriend, try having a mite infestation. The little fvkers just keep coming back
The reason I quoted Bluefront, above, is b/c he is correct; anytime you use a natural substrate like moss, you most probably will get little bugs...not necessarily mites, though. Which is the reason why I use newspaper.
NP is the best substrate, bar none. The ink will not harm your snake in any way, shape or form. I use it in all three of my cages. In the BRB's cage, I soak the NP with water every other day, so not even the wet ink hurts them. NP is ugly as sin, but cheap, doesn't harbor parasites and is the best thing out there. Period.
Now, has your snake been soaking in the water dish more than usual lately? That is a classic sign of mite infestation. The snake is trying to drown the mites. They can swim though...if you have 100 mites on the snake, 50 will drown and the rest will make it to the edge of the water bowl OR they will jsut climb higher on the snake. The snake must keep it's nostrils and mouth above water to breathe.
Coincidentally, the mouth, nostrils and eyes are the prime spots for mite infestation. Look CLOSELY at the snake's head. Mites are the size of the period at the end of this sentence. And those are the adults. Babies are smaller. Reptile mites are reddish-black in color. You will know it if you see them, b/c you will think you are seeing spots. Seriously. You'll do a "double take" and say "WTF was that?" Then you'll see them.
You need to determine if the bugs are indeed mites or not. The easiest way is this: Remove everything from the cage. Put down WHITE paper towels as substrate. Rinse the water bowl and put the snake back int here w/nothing but the water bowl and the towels. Within 24 hours, you'll know if you have mites.
I can help further, but we need to identify what the issue is.
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