Great basic fruit fly culture guide. Very similar to how I do ff cultures also.
Pictures explain alot.Well helps me. I'm new and i like it, specially the pictures reading comprehension challenge :stuart:
Awesome.Great basic fruit fly culture guide. Very similar to how I do ff cultures also.
Honestly I looked for a recipe that was simple yet effective. I'm a member on a dart frog forum and the recipe in the guide (from dart site) seemed the easiest. There were loads of different recipes which involved juice and boiling ingredients and all kinds of extras. There's a point where spending a dollar per culture and doing all these special ways of making the media which takes even longer per culture to make when I can make my simple recipe in minutes per culture and if my production is low I can easily make two if I had to. With that being said, I do think I am using too much vinegar. I know because when I walk in the bug room there are 24 cultures going. That is 6 cups of vinegar total. I like the vinegar smell actually, but it is pretty strong. How much do you use? I'm thinking about just getting some Methyl Paraben and just do away with the vinegar. Alot of sponsors on the dart site uses it. Isn't that expensive either.As Becky (Katnapper) says, this is a great basic fruit fly guide, and the pix are always a plus. You have proven that his mix is adequate for raising fruit flies.I wonder, though, if you aren't using too much vinegar. I tried proofing active yeast -- a pinch plus a pinch of sugar in a warm solution -- in plain warm water and with a mixture of 1/3 white vinegar and 2/3 warm water which you recommend. As I write this, the suspension in plain water has proofed and that in vinegar and water has only produced two bubbles of CO2. Of course, I did not try it in your mixture, but I wonder if so much vinegar does not lower the pH to a point that the yeast eiither does not ferment or does so only slowly/partially. Also, while, as you say, the yeast is eaten by the flies, it is an essential food for the larvae, so I wonder if the combination of low pH and tiny amount of yeast do not limit the total hatch. I should add that I successfully raised FFs using the same amount of yeast that you recommend (though not nearly as much vinegar), but raising ithe amount to between 12.5% and 20% of the dry weight greatly increases the hatch.This is your thread, of course, but I wonder if we couldn't have a number of members' favorite formulae submitted to an arbitrator, say Peter J.F. (ha! gotcha mate!), to compare the hatches yielded by the different mixes. I would expect that mine would yield the most, but it is also the most expensive per cup, and might not prove cost effective. What do you think?
I use only methyl paraben -1TBS for 71/2 cups of food, but when I worked in a university fly lab, many years ago, we used both together (actually, propionic acid). If you get no mold with one, why add a second? Labs never use vinegar to my knowledge, either as an egg laying stimulus or mould retarder. As I think Rebecca might have been saying, :lol: if you come up with a formula that works to your satisfaction, stick with it, but it is not a bad idea to try several formulae before settling on the one you like.It does work, so I'll stick with it. You think calcium propionate is better than Methyl Paraben? I've looked online for the calcium propionate and couldn't find it for cheap.
Well helps me. I'm new and i like it, specially the pictures reading comprehension challenge :stuart:
Great basic fruit fly culture guide. Very similar to how I do ff cultures also.
Most people culture flightless fruit fly cultures which can be purchased practically anywhere online.How do you extract them without them flying everywhere?
Also how long will it take for the fruit flies to form?
Yeah, I have some on order now, but I rather like to use "wild" mels in 12"cubes, because they distribute better and are more fecund. You can calm them down by putting their deli cup in the fridge for a few minutes (check, first time, to see how many minutes it takes to immobilize 'em). I pour mine in through a funnel, but some folks prefer to just open the lid of the nymphs' pot.Most people culture flightless fruit fly cultures which can be purchased practically anywhere online.
I've been trying to culture mels, and hydeis for the past two weeks. So far I have noticed mel. larvae but no hydei yet. The late winter we have had is not helping with ideal breeding temps :angry: I've been buying cultures like crazy too but they don't seem to last long. I have flat stomached mantids; I should have waited til at least mid-april before I got back in the mantis hobby.Yeah, I have some on order now, but I rather like to use "wild" mels in 12"cubes, because they distribute better and are more fecund. You can calm them down by putting their deli cup in the fridge for a few minutes (check, first time, to see how many minutes it takes to immobilize 'em). I pour mine in through a funnel, but some folks prefer to just open the lid of the nymphs' pot.
If you want to buy the wild type, you can get pupae very reasonably from Chuck at SpiderPharm.
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