Coat Maintenance
Sand baths absorb excess oils and keep gerbil fur clean, fluffy, and healthy without the dangers of water.
Respuesta Rápida
Most jerbos need grooming every 4-8 weeks depending on coat type. Select your jerbo's coat type below for a personalized guide.
Gerbils keep themselves clean using sand baths—similar to chinchillas. Water baths are dangerous and must be avoided. Your main grooming tasks are providing sand baths, checking the scent gland, and monitoring the tail.
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Sand baths absorb excess oils and keep gerbil fur clean, fluffy, and healthy without the dangers of water.
Gerbils have a scent gland on their belly that can become clogged or infected if not monitored.
Gerbil tails are fragile and can deglove if grabbed. Regular visual checks ensure the tail is healthy.
Grooming time lets you check for mites, lice, or skin irritation that needs treatment.
Fine bathing sand (not dust) for sand baths. Provide in a shallow dish regularly.
Heavy ceramic dish that will not tip over during enthusiastic rolling.
For inspecting the belly scent gland and checking for skin issues.
For gently cleaning around the scent gland if buildup occurs.
Instead: NEVER bathe gerbils in water. It strips natural oils, causes hypothermia, and causes extreme stress. Sand baths only.
Instead: Never grab or pull a gerbil by the tail—the skin can deglove (peel off), causing permanent damage.
Instead: Check the belly scent gland monthly. A yellow, crusty, or swollen gland may need gentle cleaning or vet attention.
Instead: Fine dust causes respiratory problems. Use proper chinchilla bathing sand, not dust.
Nuestro asistente de IA puede proporcionar recomendaciones de aseo personalizadas basadas en la raza específica y condición del pelaje de tu Jerbo.
Fuentes Confiables: AKC Grooming · ASPCA Pet Care
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