Posted: Mon Feb 27, 2006 8:29 pm
The package the light comes in should say that the light emits UVB rays (and will often give a percentage, usually 5-10%). If you're using a tube, Reptisun and Repti-Glo are two brands to look for. If you're using a compact flourescent, Reptisun and ESU are two brands (the latter, if you get a regular spiral bulb, will emit only about 3%, the desert version gives off about 7%). UVB lights are not standard in the sense that any flourescent light will give off UVB rays (it won't)--it must say so. And a bulb that says it's full spectrum isn't enough--full spectrum bulbs do not necessarily give off UVB rays.
Hatchlings may take a while to take to cuttlebone. Some turtles are never crazy for the stuff--I have a yearling eastern painted that loves the stuff, 4 others that will eat it if there's nothing else around, and a 5-month old baby that just looks at it (but will take a stab at a piece if it's put in the same time the pellets are). My RES goes back and forth, sometimes crunching it right up, and other times letting it sink. I'd try keeping a few small pieces in the tank--make them smallish (head-size or a bit smaller) and thinnish so they can be broken up easily. Cuttlebone is a good secondary calcium supplement.
"You become responsible, forever, for what you have tamed." -Antoine de Saint Exupery-