color transformation

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Sparky

The Skate Life
Joined
Jun 15, 2007
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I posted this earlier and someone said it was a stagmomantis california

Picture106.jpg


Now that it molted 4 times after i caught it. It turned green and someone else said that it was a marbled mantis.

Picture084-1.jpg


Im sure its a male. I read Rick's sticky and I saw the cup under its abdomen.

Picture085-1.jpg


 
I seen a few adult species when i went camping and some were about L5 or L3's. They were either tan or grey.

Anybody knows what might turn this one green?

 
Go back and read my thread on telling gender. There is no upturned cup shape on the male until he is adult. Yours is not adult. You need to count segments.

 
Wow, he really changed. I like the way he looks a lot actually, very cute! But, I don't know what he is. (Oh and don't pay any attention to my use of "he." I chose it randomly.)

 
Go back and read my thread on telling gender. There is no upturned cup shape on the male until he is adult. Yours is not adult. You need to count segments.
I counted 7 or 8 segments.

and thanks athicks 8)

 
Hey, Sparky, does he/she have a red-orange spot on the underside of its second or third to last abdominal segment?Kind of like this?

patag5.jpg
YEA YOU'RE RIGHT JO!!! :shock: I NEVER NOTICED THAT BEFORE! WOAH, CRAZY!

 
If the spot is there, then your mantid is an Iris oratoria. Your nymph looks just like the ones I had a couple of weeks ago (most of mine are now subadults).

Anyway, here is another picture; it's an L4 or L5 (not too sure) male I. oratoria nymph:

iris_nymfa2.jpg


 
Does anybody have a spare male for this species? I counted the segments wrong. Instead of counting on the bottom, I counted on top. I counted 6 segments on the bottom. I have a female not a male.

 
First, this species is capable of parthenogenic reproduction when males are scarce. Second, additional I. oratoria nymphs may emerge from their oothecae in the second season after the egg case is produced, i.e., when their siblings are already grown and having their own offspring.[8][9]

The sexual cannibalism of mantids often referred to in popular culture occurs in roughly one quarter of all intersexual encounters of I. oratoria.[1][10]

I got this from wikipedia Sparky, you should not need a male, but if you found her outside, go look for a male! You got enough ants.

 

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