Fighting gerbils...
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Discussion

Sway

Original Poster:

33,866 posts

218 months

Monday 26th May 2014
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We have a large corner aquarium, that for the last 3 years has been converted into a gerbilarium.

Originally bought 4 brothers, all lived happily together for nearly 18 months, then three started picking on a single brother. We removed and rehoused him. All fine since until this week...

We moved their tank last weekend, in preparation for some building works. Since then, every couple of days there has been a fight between two of the remaining brothers - same two each time. Cuts on the cheek area, fur matted with blood, although otherwise well.

Now thinking we need to separate the protagonists - but which one? The non-fighter seems fine with both, one of the fighters was the ringleader the last time round.

So, remove the 'bully' or the 'victim' (allowing for the fact that the 'bully' may just be the current dominant, and removing him may cause yet more fighting for position...

Cheers.

Granville

983 posts

195 months

Wednesday 28th May 2014
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Remove the two that are fighting and split them up and keep the two that don't fight together.

I had two sisters years back, they were fine for quite some time, but then started fighting for no apparent reason. I had to split them up in the end which seemed a shame as Gerbils are social animals. I think it's a fight for dominance, where in the wild the lesser gerbil would leave and start their own group they cant do this in captivity.

Asterix

24,438 posts

252 months

Wednesday 28th May 2014
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Damn, I so thought this was going to be like the boxing thread.

Tango13

9,892 posts

200 months

Wednesday 28th May 2014
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otolith

65,910 posts

228 months

Thursday 29th May 2014
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I wonder if reducing the size of the group is making matters worse.

S1_RS

782 posts

223 months

Thursday 29th May 2014
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They're all sexually frustrated, try adding four females to keep them occupied, just tell them to act "responsibly"!

Nightmare

5,279 posts

308 months

Thursday 29th May 2014
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We had this with 4 female hamsters. They got on fine for ages and then started fighting and wouldn't stop. Im afraid it didn't matter how we split them up - once they started they wouldn't stop. We ended up with 2 1/2 hamsters. Not having hamsters again!

Sway

Original Poster:

33,866 posts

218 months

Thursday 29th May 2014
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We've removed the worse off gerbil (George) and left two in the main tank. So now I have two solitary gerbils (in the kids playroom so they get loads of attention) and two in the main tank...

Chatting to a vet nurse last night, she thinks that it was the moving of the tank that has caused the issue - essentially it's considered as a 'new habitat' and they've started the clan dominance but again - originally this is done when they're very young, so little damage occurs... The unharmed one is the least dominant, so should be fine.

Backseatdriver

170 posts

260 months

Thursday 29th May 2014
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Nightmare - with respect hamsters should never be housed in groups, they are solitary animals and should always live alone.

otolith

65,910 posts

228 months

Thursday 29th May 2014
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Hamsters are solitary, gerbils are social.

bexVN

14,690 posts

235 months

Thursday 29th May 2014
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That is true for Syrian Hamsters but the dwarf hamsters are able to live together though the males tend to socialise better than the females smile