I know crickets in the wild dig tunnels and such in the soil, but my cricket feeders often dig in their egg laying dirt container too. I was curious if anyone lets their crickets dig tunnels?
I refilled their 3" egg laying dirt container yesterday, as they managed to kick out over a 1" of the ground coconut substrate lately. Today I noticed a few are back at it again digging tunnels in the container. One especially in the photo, I drew a arrow to it. The cricket is able to hide itself completely in the tunnel.
In the tank I keep the coconut substrate only about 1/8" thick to give them traction and help with humidity, so no digging there; however, many of the egg laying females will dig a bit to bury they abdomen as they lay eggs in the dirt container. There are others though, that will dig out tunnels and hide in them until the coconut eventually collapses or the water misting destroys the tunnels (the coconut doesn't stick together well enough to support tunnels).
Besides the obvious fact that crickets in tunnels are impossible to get out easy as feeders, will allowing them to make tunnels cause any other problems? I was thinking of perhaps adding a thicker layer of substrate in the tank to allow some of the diggers to get their wish with tunnels. Maybe a mix of sterile topsoil (from the oven) to about 1" deep and a thin layer of coconut as the top layer.
I have to admit after adding the thin 1/8" layer of substrate in their tank, and having a colony of Springtails and Isopods in there too - I haven't had any problems with dead crickets or cleaning really. I pick out a occasion dead cricket (from age) and clean the water bottles and add food, and the rest takes care of itself it seems. It also has little to no odor ever - just the chirping can get a bit old (but my wife loves the noise ).
So I don't think the tunnels would really affect cleaning either. Any thoughts about it?
Below I also added a photo of at least 4 generations of new cricket nymphs in the same egg crate spot. I say at least, as the newly hatched nymphs are all but invisible. My colony is really taking off anymore with breeding. I also did a post on some photos of their eggs.
I refilled their 3" egg laying dirt container yesterday, as they managed to kick out over a 1" of the ground coconut substrate lately. Today I noticed a few are back at it again digging tunnels in the container. One especially in the photo, I drew a arrow to it. The cricket is able to hide itself completely in the tunnel.
In the tank I keep the coconut substrate only about 1/8" thick to give them traction and help with humidity, so no digging there; however, many of the egg laying females will dig a bit to bury they abdomen as they lay eggs in the dirt container. There are others though, that will dig out tunnels and hide in them until the coconut eventually collapses or the water misting destroys the tunnels (the coconut doesn't stick together well enough to support tunnels).
Besides the obvious fact that crickets in tunnels are impossible to get out easy as feeders, will allowing them to make tunnels cause any other problems? I was thinking of perhaps adding a thicker layer of substrate in the tank to allow some of the diggers to get their wish with tunnels. Maybe a mix of sterile topsoil (from the oven) to about 1" deep and a thin layer of coconut as the top layer.
I have to admit after adding the thin 1/8" layer of substrate in their tank, and having a colony of Springtails and Isopods in there too - I haven't had any problems with dead crickets or cleaning really. I pick out a occasion dead cricket (from age) and clean the water bottles and add food, and the rest takes care of itself it seems. It also has little to no odor ever - just the chirping can get a bit old (but my wife loves the noise ).
So I don't think the tunnels would really affect cleaning either. Any thoughts about it?
Below I also added a photo of at least 4 generations of new cricket nymphs in the same egg crate spot. I say at least, as the newly hatched nymphs are all but invisible. My colony is really taking off anymore with breeding. I also did a post on some photos of their eggs.
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