yeah i second thisHow about Hadogenes sp. (Flatrocks)?
Mostly dry habitat, huge and virtually no sting to worry about.
John
];')
Those don't qualify as desert scorpsi have a couple of big emperors not venomous and very handleable
Those are really cool setups. Very economical haha. I like them.Yeah I didn't even think about those! Some people complain about not seeing them in terrs. I keep them in these flat containers, some people might want more room for them though. But they seem to do very well in these. They have two places to go between, ...the rock and the substrate, and the rock and the plastic on top. They like to squeeze between the plastic and top a lot so I seem them a lot. It's cool to watch them chase down something when they are hungry. But they seem to be good at keeping most of the calories they put in so you can fill them up fast. I'm going to breed these trogs but the male isn't adult yet, I think I'll live that long. You almost have to be squeezing these for them to sting in defense, but they sting some of the smallest prey they clamp on to ..pinchy dooods. I offer water because I did see them drink ...finally.
I like them. So much harder to find generally than paucidens. Pm me if you ever get babies you're trying to sell.Thanks, I forgot about the pic. The setups aren't very pretty but the scorps seem real comfy in them, seem secure, they hide and look healthy. And the male I mentioned there in the post has matured and I've bred 3 females since. I worry about trogs not being exported from Africa someday so I might as well try to get babies. To me, a nice, big desert species:drool: . But it might be one where some usually either like them or they don't.