Hi all,
My journey towards what feels like keeping Mantids alive rather than raising them continues. I have 3 Chinese Mantids, all at L6. The strongest one, who my son named "Bug" and my class of elementary students adores has developed an issue with vomit or diarrhea. The ceiling of his enclosure along with one of the sides has dark brown sludge on it. He has not been eating for 3-4 days now, which I thought was because he was preparing for a molt. I've only noticed this dark brown substance today.
Recently he was moved into a larger enclosure. It has a fake plant, a magnolia branch and leaf that I boiled and coconut shavings substrate. He has been eating almost exclusively blue bottle flies. About a week ago I gave him a meal worm to eat. I'm also worried that I don't know how to control humidity with a very new environment and that could be causing it. I've been spraying the enclosure once a day, about 10 sprays.
Thoughts?
Attached are pictures of the substance.
My journey towards what feels like keeping Mantids alive rather than raising them continues. I have 3 Chinese Mantids, all at L6. The strongest one, who my son named "Bug" and my class of elementary students adores has developed an issue with vomit or diarrhea. The ceiling of his enclosure along with one of the sides has dark brown sludge on it. He has not been eating for 3-4 days now, which I thought was because he was preparing for a molt. I've only noticed this dark brown substance today.
Recently he was moved into a larger enclosure. It has a fake plant, a magnolia branch and leaf that I boiled and coconut shavings substrate. He has been eating almost exclusively blue bottle flies. About a week ago I gave him a meal worm to eat. I'm also worried that I don't know how to control humidity with a very new environment and that could be causing it. I've been spraying the enclosure once a day, about 10 sprays.
Thoughts?
Attached are pictures of the substance.