I forget the brand I used. I just moved and most of everything is still packed. Anyhow, as Cyndy mentioned, it's to be used on molding eggs. I haven't had to use it on any of my lizard eggs, but I have used it on snake eggs and with success.
What are you using as an incubation medium? I've used either vermiculite or bed-a-beast. I've only gotten mold on the eggs themselves and not the medium. It sounds like you may have it too moist. In my experience, too moist results in either drowned eggs or small hatchlings. I generally try to keep all my eggs at about 60-75% humidity. With fertile eggs, I've had either a 100% hatch rate or pretty darn close to 100% rate in: leopard geckos, tokays, agulated gold dust day geckos, bearded dragon, anoles, crested geckos, chuckwallas, collared lizards, desert iguanas, carpet pythons, cal kings, and western hognose, all of which incubated at the 60-75% humidity range. Chris ----- Original Message ----- From: "Cyndy" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent: Friday, March 15, 2002 10:14 AM Subject: Re:[Gecko] incubation > I have heard of people putting the athlete's foot powder on eggs that are starting to mold, but not in the medium. > Cyndy > > Ive heard people say that you can use athletes foot powder in your incubation medium to help cut back on the growth of mold spores in humid egg incubation chambers? Has anyone heard the same, or tried using it? Ive also heard that corn starch could be used the same way? Any feed back..... It seems Im always wrestling with mold growth and there spores. > > > > Thanks, > > Bryan > > > > --------------------------------- > Do You Yahoo!? > Yahoo! Sports - live college hoops coverage > > > > ########################################################################### > THE GLOBAL GECKO ASSOCIATION LISTSERV > WebSite: www.gekkota.com Archive: [EMAIL PROTECTED]/ > The GGA takes no responsibility for the contents of these postings. > ########################################################################### >
