JonRich
Well-known member
I've searched the forum for a similar experiment with zero results (a lot of F/S adds though, lol). Well I get bored and I have the tanks and my female Ghost is on her 3rd ooth, so there is no shortage there . So why not, rite?
I don't know much about this, I'm just going by observation. My female is dark brown and my male is more of a cream color. They all hatch out black and "any like". I believe the gene is present for almost any color range between brown to green . I believe the trigger is environmental (foliage and humidity) and takes dominance after the first molt . Too dry and triggy and they will go brown, more humid and leafy green foliage and they will go lighter brown to green . I see very few people keeping them in a naturalistic enclosure. (Mostly small cups with twigs. So I assume most tend to be brown).
I have a well planted tank that's humid with live green plants . I'll try to build another tank to mimic a dryer tank with just dried twigs/leaves and mist less frequently . Then split the hatchlings between the two tanks for a more controlled environmental experiment . (I have an ooth that's anout 2-3 weeks from hatching).
The plan is to see if more brown mantis are produced in the "dry, dead twig tank" and more green mantis are produced in the "wet, leafy green tank"
I'll keep you posted.
Not sure why it won't let me post pix . I'll make a short video later of the two tanks .
I don't know much about this, I'm just going by observation. My female is dark brown and my male is more of a cream color. They all hatch out black and "any like". I believe the gene is present for almost any color range between brown to green . I believe the trigger is environmental (foliage and humidity) and takes dominance after the first molt . Too dry and triggy and they will go brown, more humid and leafy green foliage and they will go lighter brown to green . I see very few people keeping them in a naturalistic enclosure. (Mostly small cups with twigs. So I assume most tend to be brown).
I have a well planted tank that's humid with live green plants . I'll try to build another tank to mimic a dryer tank with just dried twigs/leaves and mist less frequently . Then split the hatchlings between the two tanks for a more controlled environmental experiment . (I have an ooth that's anout 2-3 weeks from hatching).
The plan is to see if more brown mantis are produced in the "dry, dead twig tank" and more green mantis are produced in the "wet, leafy green tank"
I'll keep you posted.
Not sure why it won't let me post pix . I'll make a short video later of the two tanks .
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