Anyone ever heard that water is the ultimate solvent? It can dissolve anything..... in time? Given enough time it can dissolve whatever you throw into it. It will dissolve granite and diamonds.... in time. IN TIME is the clincher.... it ain't gonna happen in one human lifetime..... but in 'one universal lifetime'. Big diff.
Same with calci sand, reptisand... all those calcium based sands. They're 100% digestible... IN TIME. Give the digestive juices enough time, and they'll dissolve all those little grains of calcium compounds into mush. As long as you keep adding fresh proper-strength digestive juices, and leave the sand in contact with it long enough... the sand too will pass
........ In time.
Which leopard (or other gecko, lizard or snake) has that much time to digest one grain of sand?? Not in one lifetime. The grains just sit inside, pile up in a tight gut corner, calcium content neutralizing acidic digestive juices... neutral digestion going on.... add more fresh digestive juice with the next meal and pile on more fresh sand particles to congregate inside the gut.... around and around and around we go...
Check out the discussion on the Gecko List about impaction in geckos. I've included the URLs and copied the pertinent parts of the posts.
BTW, the "Keith" being quoted is Dr Keith Benson DVM:
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http://lists.gekkota.com/pipermail/g...il/001438.html
I have seen many lizards, who were well supplemented with minerals, that still killed themselves eating this material. Many animals eat inappropriate objects (particularly young ones) regardless of their nutritional state.
Be careful out there.
Keith
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Another one from "Keith" replying to Julie Bergman from The Gecko Ranch:
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http://lists.gekkota.com/pipermail/g...il/001437.html
Julie Bergman wrote:
> Digestible my butt! These bags of junk flat out lie! As soon as these
> "digestible" products came out all kinds of lizards started getting
> impacted on the stuff according to non-dom vets I work with.
Now julie, technically it is digestable. A very tiny amount will eventually dissolve in stomach acid. Of course in the real world this never works and many lizards die.
There is little control over the truth in advertizing for these products - and many manufacturers knw this and knowingly deceive the public.
Keith
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http://lists.gekkota.com/pipermail/g...il/001443.html
Calcium carbonate is indeed digestable - it will dissolve in a low pH aqueous solution - such as that in the stomach. But - it only works so well, and ingesting similar quantities of CaCO2 to those of what is seen in a sand impaction would likely overwhealm the system,
Keith
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If you want to read the entire discussion, go to
http://lists.gekkota.com/pipermail/g...il/thread.html 2003-April Archives by Thread and read the "sand impactment " thread.
All I can say is why risk the life of your pet(s) because the sand looks so pretty or conducts heat or whatever the reason?