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Everything posted by Salmonsaladsandwich
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Wow, considering that you only have a few females that's a really good hatch rate. No matter how much my population of adult Platymeris grows I always have an abysmally slow trickle of nymphs hatching.
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Nice! They sure are leggy. Around how many have hatched?
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The melanistic individuals are neat. Funny how some pictures on google show adults that lack the red stripes on their hind femora, yet that one has them despite everything else being black. Do you keep all the adults communally? Do they cluster together on bark and other surfaces like Platymeris?
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I must say, I never would've guessed that dead leaves have the nutritional density to cause pest outbreaks.
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I mean dry brown leaves. Leaves turn into dirt under the conditions in which they decompose in nature... i don't really see the problem with them turning into dirt? I doubt they would turn into dirt so fast that you couldn't feed them to the roaches first.
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Do foliage- feeding scarabs live longer and produce more eggs than sugar feeders?
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Might be because finding the right types rotten leaves outside is a lot easier than identifying well rotted wood. And i'm not sure that fermenting leaves is necessary. Roaches and isopods will eat dry leaves and leaves rot just from being in a moist enclosure. Also... i think rotten leaves should smell something like a mushy forest.
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You can't really expect common names to be perfect in the sense that they couldn't apply to something else. That's what scientific names are for. Diving beetles aren't the only beetles that dive, carrion beetles aren't the only beetles that eat carrion, and longhorn beetles aren't the only beetles to have long antennae nor are they universally long- horned, but IMO those are perfectly good common names for dytiscids, silphids and cerambycids respectively.
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You should flip through a moth field guide sometimes... lots of crazy names. "The Thinker", the "Grateful Midget", the "Unarmed Wainscot" etc. and a number of interesting Catacola underwing names including the Charming, Betrothed, Married, Sordid, Mourning, Sad, Tearful, Inconsolable, and Dejected Underwings. (I hope whoever named all those underwings was ok...). "Heart and dart" is actually a pretty good name, it refers to the shape of a pattern on the moth's wings. I think "ground beetle" is pretty well established as an unambiguous common name for carabids.
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Lithobius forficatus young!
Salmonsaladsandwich replied to Matttoadman's topic in Other Invertebrates
Fruits? Huh. I used to keep a stone centipede that would eat small plant seedlings that sprouted in its container. -
Anadenobolus monilicornis enclosure size?
Salmonsaladsandwich replied to Matttoadman's topic in Other Invertebrates
Yeah, looks like it. -
Anadenobolus monilicornis enclosure size?
Salmonsaladsandwich replied to Matttoadman's topic in Other Invertebrates
Pretty similar to the picture CodeWilster posted. I wonder if they can be selectively bred for stronger striping? -
Anadenobolus monilicornis enclosure size?
Salmonsaladsandwich replied to Matttoadman's topic in Other Invertebrates
Mine arrived today. The person said they would send a "good mix of sizes", but there doesn't seem to be any longer than two inches. They're all quite tiny compared to be Narceus. -
Anadenobolus monilicornis enclosure size?
Salmonsaladsandwich replied to Matttoadman's topic in Other Invertebrates
Did you get these on Ovogram by any chance? I also have some on the way. Just how big are these guys as adults? I've read conflicting reports, from 2 inches or less to 4 inches. (which I believe to be untrue, there's no photos of any nearly that large.) -
Anyone breeding termits?
Salmonsaladsandwich replied to Xenoblatta's topic in General Blattodea Discussions
I had to leave for 2 weeks a while back and the substrate dried out and all the termites died... it was doing quite well up until that point though. Eating lots of cardboard, saw a lot of new nymphs etc. if you want a colony vigorous enough to feed off you should start with as many termites as you can capture. I recommend setting a bunch of termite traps to collect termites for the colony and to feed your frogs for as long as possible before it gets too cold to collect them outside. Like, I'm talking a giant bin filled with a ton of substrate and cardboard and thousands of termites. Otherwise you might not have enough to last through the winter. -
Subterranean termites. The small termites that live underground. So long as you get nymphs (capable of becoming any caste) or immature reproductives (recognizable by their slightly larger size and wingbuds) they'll eventually produce secondary reproductives and start breeding.
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Ants aren't very good feeders. They grow and breed very slowly, at least in captivity. If you can find subterranean termites those are a better option- they can easily be trapped in large numbers by burying a PVC pipe with a few holes drilled into it stuffed with cardboard in the ground near where you've seen termites. They should colonize the cardboard and before long you'll be able to obtain hundreds or thousands of termites from the trap. For winter you can take a bunch of termites indoors and keep them on damp soil and cardboard. They'll produce reproductives and start breeding and eventually you could have a thriving colony of termites.
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In bright light (e.g outdoors) they gray and red stripes are really beautiful, but in poor lighting they just sort of look brown. They are very prolific, the amount of babies now is just unbelievable.
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My N. annularis have laid tons of eggs and I'm starting to see babies.
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Other Critters in the House
Salmonsaladsandwich replied to Cassidy_Brigh's topic in Other Invertebrates
That's not actually an assassin, that's a conifer seed bug. -
Blind Pet Roach Owner
Salmonsaladsandwich replied to Crazy Bug Lady's topic in General Blattodea Discussions
If you ever get the opportunity I'd recommend handling a hickory horned devil caterpillar. Very interesting invert from a tactile perspective, and I find the scent and sounds associated with caterpillars chewing away at fresh leaves to be pleasant. -
Ultimate "Cave roach" Display ideas
Salmonsaladsandwich replied to Matttoadman's topic in Enclosures and Barriers
Great Stuff is often used in vivariums for dart frogs and other sensitive animals. It's harmless. Though I wouldn't trust roaches not to chew on it and wreck the background. Sheets of bark, a coconut fiber background or psydeus's other suggestions might be better and great stuff doesn't always look very natural. -
Polyphaga saussurei adult?
Salmonsaladsandwich replied to Manuel_P's topic in General Blattodea Discussions
I think so, Hisserdude will be able to tell you for sure. -
Cleaner crews for assassins
Salmonsaladsandwich replied to lovebugfarm's topic in Other Invertebrates
I think dry sand can make an attractive setup... Pretty sure Platymeris are found in arid habitats in the wild as well. -
Cleaner crews for assassins
Salmonsaladsandwich replied to lovebugfarm's topic in Other Invertebrates
Or just keep them on dry sand to prevent mold.