Quizzes & Puzzles12 mins ago
Slow worm.
4 Answers
I've been looking after an injured slow worm for the past three weeks. Something attacked it in my back garden and bit off a sizeable portion of it's tail. It's in a plastic container with a small container of drinking water. The tail wound seems to be healing nicely - I've cleaned out all the tiny maggots and the appalling smell has gone. The problem is that I can't get him/her to take any food. I've tried earthworms, small slugs, caterpillars even bits of chicken and cheese. All I get is a quick flick of its tongue but no eating. I believe lizards can go quite a while between meals....anybody any thoughts? I would hate for its tail to be almost healed but in the meantime it starves to death! Obviously I don't want to put it back into the wild until its fully recovered.
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by sidkid. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Are you sure something has taken a chunk out of the tail or is the end of the tail missing? If the latter, as keithlbw says, shedding the tail is a natural defense mechanism and the slow worm won't suffer unduly. I would make sure it has plenty of water over worrying about if it is taking food or not and would also release it near to where you found it...