demon
Feb 14 2010, 04:40 AM
Hello everyone i now keep and breed Dermestid Beetles!I have them in a huge kritter keeper with papertowels and cardboard for substrate.You know the thing in cookie bags where they keep the cookies?[Like in dad's cookies] i use that as a hide and then throw on some papertowels and moisten them.I only have about 10 just to get some experince and to build the colony up nice and slow.
BugmanPrice
Feb 15 2010, 10:57 PM
Are you raising them to use in skeletonizing or just for fun? Pretty neat…
demon
Feb 15 2010, 11:36 PM
Kinda for both for fun right now though.I like starting small at about 10.I used to have a colony in the 1000 then mites took over.From what i have read if you got mites you were pretty much doomed as they stop the beetles from breeding and feeding and aventually your colony dies.I can't wait till these start reproducing for some reason mine still think they are in the wild,They refuse to pupate and turn into beetles which is annoying.Come summer i'll get about 100 as i care less about them.The thing with dermestid beetles is that they thrive on neglect.Which helps a lot when wasp season comes and ant season.I already have my queen ant and she has larvae!I'll keep everyone updated on this colony of mine though.
Here is a discription of my setup:
from the biggest kritter keeper i have,I placed in a piece of cardboard.I then covered the bottom with papertowels.I then placed a cookie thing into it and underneath is where their food is.This will help a lot as then i can have them in the light yet they can still feed in total darkness.I then added a plastic tube in one corner and then threw in 5 toliet paper rolls.If all goes well i should have a productive colony in about 3 months thats a big IF though.
Ralph
Feb 17 2010, 01:50 AM
I happened upon some household dermestids and decided to give them a try. Is there a species key/gallery anywhere?
demon
Feb 17 2010, 02:34 AM
You mean a specific ID thing most likely i'll dig one up.Oh btw are they larvae?If not do they look like the one in my picture?If not are they pure black?They may be Dermestes Maculatas or Dermestes Lardarius or the new species im keeping the black carpet beetle!If you need any care info i have a forum thats deticated to this stuff.
demon
Feb 17 2010, 02:37 AM
Found the site i was looking for.
http://www.dermestidae.com/Abbildungen.htmlMy species is Dermestes Lardarius.
Ralph
Feb 17 2010, 10:03 PM
They are adults. They look a lot like some Attagenus spp. or Anthrenus spp.
demon
Feb 18 2010, 02:00 AM
Cool i can't seem to find alive adults yet.Just wait in the summer i'll say now i can't find larvae.I love the larvae.Hope you get a colony going!
Zephyr
May 11 2010, 09:09 PM
Although I'm no expert, I've found that my beetles thrive when kept under pretty basic conditions with a few catches;
1. I keep them bone dry and mist once every other day.
2. I keep the enclosure sterile except for their frass and little pellets of styrofoam they tear out of the chunks I give them.
3. I keep the food concentrated in one area (in a styrofoam cup) and just let a tiny bit of it tip over into the enclosure.
I currently have so many I have no idea what to do with them all. lol
demon
May 12 2010, 09:52 PM
Lol i just got my first beetle frenzy sorta small but they are breeding should have a larvae frenzy soon.Have 50 now.Kool how they all started from about four adults and a few larvae.
Zephyr
May 28 2010, 06:11 PM
Update!
I believe my main colony consists primarily of D. maculatus and some other small species (one that lacks the white fluff on the underside of the abdomen.)
I'm also starting colonies of D. lardarius (from a single female I found on my window

) and what I believe to be D. ater.
demon
May 29 2010, 03:54 PM
Trust me d lardarius is soo damn common here i could find 1000+ in my house. I have a colony of lardarius at about 50+ they breed quite slow at the start[depends on how many you start with i started with four on Jan 25 and now have well over 50+.] With one gravid female you could propably get more then i did see i didn't know how to properly keep d lardarius at the start. Water[a little squirt or mist] helps with the egg production. Thus more larvae hatch[which for some reason my larvae started out as these orange dudes that are slow then now they are really dark and run like mad and eat 10% more.] what do you plan to feed your new colonies? I feed mine fish flakes,dog food,catfood and sometimes meat. Mine are ment to eat dead mealworms and stuff.
Zephyr
May 30 2010, 01:41 AM
QUOTE (demon @ May 29 2010, 03:54 PM)

Trust me d lardarius is soo damn common here i could find 1000+ in my house. I have a colony of lardarius at about 50+ they breed quite slow at the start[depends on how many you start with i started with four on Jan 25 and now have well over 50+.] With one gravid female you could propably get more then i did see i didn't know how to properly keep d lardarius at the start. Water[a little squirt or mist] helps with the egg production. Thus more larvae hatch[which for some reason my larvae started out as these orange dudes that are slow then now they are really dark and run like mad and eat 10% more.] what do you plan to feed your new colonies? I feed mine fish flakes,dog food,catfood and sometimes meat. Mine are ment to eat dead mealworms and stuff.
I have them on a "base" mix of ferret food (the cheap kind, not the expensive stuff

) and dog food crushed into tiny chunks. I feed old mealworm pupae to the adults. My big colony of D. maculatus (which may have a few D. ater or another species that is particularly fond of flying) gets anything that dies around here.
demon
May 30 2010, 03:16 AM
Wow. My larders eat fish flakes like its candy. can you post some pictures?
Zephyr
May 31 2010, 07:19 PM
I'll get some pictures once the larvae get bigger.
demon
Jun 1 2010, 02:32 AM
Cool!
demon
Jun 6 2010, 05:20 PM
I swear these things,once bred to a certian point just explode in population have 90 of them now.
demon
Jun 21 2010, 11:16 PM
Lost my whole colony and now only have 40+.
This is a "lo-fi" version of our main content. To view the full version with more information, formatting and images, please
click here.