The answer depends on what your unique shape is. Alternatively, just make a lid that is somewhat bigger than the terrarium and so sits comfortable to top of it.
yes, just make sure the humidity is below 95.
i think for how do you make a terrarium they want pictures and how you make a terrarium
you make one terrarium cold and one terrarium hot and see where the bacteria grows more
The armadillo is a mammal, just because it has a "shell" that does not make the armadillo a reptile.
reptiles and wild flowers
You make a terrarium by taking a large jar and then you put soil into it. Then after that, you select the types of plants you would like to use in your terrarium, according to how much sun they should get. You plant them, and you can water them whenever the soil seems dry, or you can put a lid onto of the jar so it's like a self-watering system. Make sure that the jar or container is large enough for the plants you put in it. Good Luck ;)
find a female reptile and a male reptile. then get some tweezers, lotion and a turkey baster.
I wouldn't use soil (out of the garden) in a terrarium, unless only plants are to be kept in it. Even then, I would use a compost mixture of a John Innes, type, from a garden centre (UK spelling). If plants and animals are to be kept, use sand or gravel or a mixture of both, after it has been heat or steam sterilized to prevent introducing diseases into the terrarium.
Helps make baby/reproduce
If you mean, how do you make a cloud, get a terrarium and put some wet dirt in it, then leave it sealed over in the sun.
To start your reptile and amphibian habitat, you need a glass terrarium, big enough for your new guest. For lizards, you will need one thick layer of pebbles then covered with good soil. Plant some little weeds or other small plants in the soil. Water the plants two to three times a week. The lizard will lap up the drops (most will not drink from a dish). Frogs, toads, and turtles need a shallow reptile drinking dish. Lizards could starve to death even if surrounded by piles of dead bugs. Drop in a live cricket and it will be a meal at once. Turtles can be fed dog food with mostly meat, along as some berries, greens, and veggies. Snakes and toads don't do well in terrariums, for they like to burrow. They are best kept on bare pebbles. Put some hiding places in the terrarium such as bark, cardboard, or just a paper bag halfway buried in the pebbles. If it gets too cold, they could stop eating, but too much heat could kill them, so put a small light or heating stone in the corner of the terrarium. newts and salamanders need a small pool of water to swim in, and need moist soil. Feed them small slugs and crickets.
Some gecko's can make a barking-like sounds.