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I was out splitting an old chunk of decomposing maple and I found a nest of blue-tailed skink eggs,
I gathered them up with the sawdust they seemed to be in, but now I am looking for advice on what to do with them now.
Does anyone have any ideas? Thanks in advance.
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Well as usual, when you post something, it means I'm going to learn something. I had no idea what a blue-tail skink is.
You obviouly are not going to detroy them, or you wouldn't be asking the question. So as I researched as to what a skink is, I see three immediate options...build a new nest for them in the wild, incubate them yourself, or give them up for adoption to someone else who will.
If you keep them, here are two options I pulled from the internet by asking "What to do with Blue-tail Skink eggs":
Option 1: Return Them to the Wild
If the eggs are still in a relatively safe location and just exposed (e.g., in leaf litter or under a board), put them back.
Option 2: Incubate Them Indoors
If the nest was completely destroyed or is in a high-traffic area, you can incubate them.
I'm rather confident you have or could have found this info yourself - so thanks for letting me share what I have learned so far. There is a whole other world out there by searching on Blue-tailed Skink. Who knew?
We have plenty of the blue tails Lars, wish we were close enough to get them adopted
<reposting from earlier> for some reason my text came in as white text. Lets try it again with black text shall we?
Many Thanks Lars.
I did find some of that information, but certainly not all of it.
Like I said, I was splitting up chunks of wood. A maple chunk was decomposing pretty significantly, and the BTS seems to have made her nest inside the piece of wood. When I split the wood, I happened to have split open the nest, spilling her and her eggs all over the area. She scuttled off, and I carefully scooped up the eggs and a fair bit of the ‘sawdust’ that seemed to have been in the nest the eggs. There was NO chance of know what side of the eggs were up. I have put the sawdust and the eggs in a small bucket and left it on the porch this morning. It will feel the warmth from the day, but stay out of the drying sun.
I saw one report where they put the eggs (and compost in that instance) into a glass canning jar and then buried the jar in the dirt. Being as I believe this nest was inside a chunk of wood, there is no chance of me trying to replicate that. I guess I can leave the eggs in the bucket and hope the little critters don’t climb out. Maybe I can rig up a make shift breathable lid or something. Hard to say when they will hatch - Could be today, could be about 43 days from now.
I saw pictures of new born BTS... They are cute little buggers. 😝
I guess almost anything new born is cute, right?
Thanks Again!
Ok - I see your Blue-tail Skink and raise you a Green Anole. Often called the American chameleon or garden lizard, it is the only true green lizard native to the state of Texas. This fellow...Manfred... has been hanging around for quite awhile all around my garden pots of Tarragon, Thyme, Oregano and other herbs. Since we seem to have taken a break from knife bragging, I thought I would learn more about Manfred and brag about my neighborhood lizzard.
Introducing Manfred:
Not Manfred - but an Interest photo showing the dewlap.
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