Interesting news, the female just laid an ooth outside today! We’ve had unusually high temps in the 50’s and I guess she had enough nutrition to produce one.
I find old wild mantids that usually don’t have too long to live and help them by feeding them inside, but I don’t have space to set up insect live food for only a few weeks because after I won’t need them. That’s why I use baby food
Is there such a thing sold as powdered insects?
Reason I ask, is injured or old mantids that can’t hunt properly I find love to eat chicken or Turkey baby food.
But if they made powdered insects you could just add water and make an instant insect paste to feed them instead.
This discovery is interesting, but at the same time brings up a sensitive topic.
Many put mantises in cold temps to humanely euthanize, but seeing how they can bounce back after periods of cold temps, are we killing live mantids and tossing them out unknowingly?
Is it possible for wild...
I’ve gotten them in a small cardboard box package with no heat pack but in something so they don’t get bashed against the box during shipping, but mine we mostly Chinese ooths.
I found a Chinese mantis female outside a month ago solid and not moving, I thought it was dead.
I placed it under a shrub and checked on it next day and it was alive in a shrub! I fed it Turkey baby food, and for a month since it’s still outside alive! It moves into direct sunlight to warm up...
I had mantis ooths lost in the mail for two months almost during cold weather so they stayed dormant. The shipper had them in an envelope wrapped in bubble wrap. 🤦♂️ Would this kill the eggs inside?