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Old 29-04-2005, 03:15 PM
Siouxzi
 
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Well, DUH. Why didn't I guess this before? Found under a log, too
small to be reptile eggs, too small and firm to be amphibian eggs...
of course they are SLUG eggs. I found a tiny snail in my terrarium and
that got me googling... but I think they're still slug and not snail
eggs.

Scroll down here for a photo--small, but that's what they look like
except the ones I found are perhaps a tad larger:
http://www.greengardener.co.uk/slug.htm

Here's another photo. The ones I found were translucent like these,
but a bit whiter:
http://ipm.osu.edu/image/slugegg.htm

This species is obviously quite different:
http://www.nawwal.org/~mrgoff/photoj...8-03eggs1.html

Not very exciting, eh? I tossed out my terrarium before the rest could
hatch. ;^)

Cheers
Sue


"Siouxzi" wrote in message
.. .
Not sure whether to ask for a herpetologist or an entomologist...

Gardening this weekend, I moved some 4x4 landscape timbers from where
they were resting and rotting around the borders of my flower garden.
As usual, I found several of my buddies, the Worm Snakes, under the
timbers, and gently moved them away to safety while I worked. But then
I found something else: two clutches of 6-10 eggs that I had never
seen or noticed before. They were nestled in a depression under the
timber where they could lay moist and undisturbed. One clutch was
right next to the curled-up earth snake... but are snake eggs round or
oval?

The eggs are smaller than a BB, perhaps the size of a small cilantro
seed. They are shiny, translucent, and whitish in color with a gray
dot barely visible inside, probably the developing critter or some
part thereof. The eggs are firm and not gelatinous or sticky. They're
not stuck together either. I was afraid of smashing them when I
replaced the timbers, so I made a little terrarium so I could see what
they'll hatch into. Just some pebbles and soil, dampened, and a piece
of wet black mulching cloth to keep them moist and out of direct
light.

Could they be salamandar or snake eggs, or did I just provide a
hatchery for something disgusting like slugs? I can't find any egg
photos on the internet.

Cheers


Sue
BTW I used to think that earth snakes and worm snakes were two names
for the same thing. But according to his page they're not. Most of the
snakes I find in my yard are worm snakes--they are beautiful with a
pink belly. But yesterday one of the snakes I found WAS an earth
snake--darker above, cream belly.
http://www.montgomerycountymd.gov/co...enus_002. jpg