Tell us the conditions in which you were keeping the fruit flies, how old the culture is, etc., so we can try to help you figure out what happened.So I came home today and I realized my fruit flies weren't moving in their culture! It seems as though they are all dead I don't know what happened! Please help asap
@Sarah KTell us the conditions in which you were keeping the fruit flies, how old the culture is, etc., so we can try to help you figure out what happened.
In the meantime, you will have to order more. Or you could take a trip to a Petco or Petsmart, and they might have some you can pick up there as well.
@izbiggsAll fruit fly cultures crash, which means that all of the flies seem to drop at once! This usually takes a couple of weeks, since that is the lifespan of the flies, but it also depends on if there were mites, mold, or if it dried out. I'm guessing what happened is that the usual crash occurred, which doesn't make you a bad fruit fly keeper! It's totally normal for all of them to seemingly drop at once. It'll take a little while for new flies to come back, so I would suggest getting a new culture in the meantime.
Good luck!
Once a FF culture crashes it is done, it will not repopulate.Oh sweet I'm sorry I didn't see your comment. So they will come back in the same culture? How long will it take ? I bought some new ones plus 4 crickets too keep his hunger at bay how do I keep those alive ?
@izbiggs
Once a FF culture crashes it is done, it will not repopulate.
So I'm glad to hear you got more FF as they tend to live 3-4 weeks in a single culture. The trick is to take out at least 25 FF (more flies is always better) and start a new culture see Orin's guide here. How often to start new cultures depends on your need for them (which most of us do weekly).
For crickets just give them a container they can not escape from, a place to hide (empty piece of egg crate or cardboard tube (paper towel or toilet paper tubes)), and food and water (many use potatoes as it is simple solution to food and water (carrots are said by several to cause problems to mantids that eat the crickets)). Unless you are culturing the crickets, then chicken waterers (jar and base) and ground cat food (or a mix) are the best.
Crickets can be kept in cooler temperatures, 60s F, to make them keep their size/life longer (as the cooler temps keep them from molting as quick) - but room temperature is fine. Otherwise, for breeding warmer temps of 80-85F work great, and the eggs hatch much quicker too.
Personally I feed my larger crickets and have for years without incident, with maybe one death I can contribute to crickets but even that is doubtful.
Other sustainable feeders that can be cultured are crickets of course, cockroaches, wax worms (which grow into molts), mealworms, and black solider flies are the more common varieties for mantids. In warm months I personally just capture wild feeders (houseflies, bottle flies, moths, even field crickets, and such) with simple traps or my sweep nets.Okay sounds good I think that I will feed crickets only after this culture I got is done it really sucks that the flies don't live long it's going to be hard for me to keep them :/ if you have any other suggestions for sustainable food I would love to hear it my mom is getting worried that I won't feed him properly or I will run out of food which is making me worry too
Other sustainable feeders that can be cultured are crickets of course, cockroaches, wax worms (which grow into molts), mealworms, and black solider flies are the more common varieties for mantids. In warm months I personally just capture wild feeders (houseflies, bottle flies, moths, even field crickets, and such) with simple traps or my sweep nets.
The best way to move fruit flies from one location to another is by stunning them into stillness right before moving them to a new location. To do this, you can actually put your entire fruit fly culture into the freezer for 2-3 minutes. This is not long enough to kill them, but just long enough to give you a short window of a few moments (usually less than a minute) where they will not be able to move very quickly, or at all. You should transfer the fruit flies to the new culture while the fruit flies are still groggy from the short stint in the freezer. This works during feeding time as well.Fruit Flies - Just as easy as meal worms but a bit more upkeep. Basic culture medium (there is a massive sticky thread on all of the recipes) is dirt cheap and easy to make. Honestly moving flies from one culture to the next to keep them going is the hardest part. This doubles in difficulty as soon as you are breeding the wild flying variety.
Like your sense of humor. :clap:@Zeppy44 @Sarah K @Teamonger @CosbyArt
@cwebster THANK YOU I would be pretty lost with all of your specific answers. How long do the meal worms live? You all rock or should I say you all bug ...get it..because we are "bug" people...not geologists....get it cuz..rock. :/
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