Empusa Pennata

Mantidforum

Help Support Mantidforum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
Get A Wine Cooler It Will Set From 40 To 65 With The Push Of A button

 
bla bla bla

@_@

Guys

If you dont know current species , please dont say ********* like this.

Those mantis I offered are AFTER NATURAL DISAPAUSE , they are WILD CAUGHT

How the EMPUSA could get to L5-6 if they not pass disapauses ? Its impossible...

Use ur brains ^^

 
bla bla bla

@_@

Guys

If you dont know current species , please dont say ********* like this.

Those mantis I offered are AFTER NATURAL DISAPAUSE , they are WILD CAUGHT

How the EMPUSA could get to L5-6 if they not pass disapauses ? Its impossible...

Use ur brains ^^
Actually no. Location makes a HUGE difference. Do you even know where you got them? They diapause at L7/L8 not L5/L6.

 
I have heard so many different answers to this the last 2 days. I heard it was subadult as well.

 
Actually no. Location makes a HUGE difference. Do you even know where you got them? They diapause at L7/L8 not L5/L6.
Thats not what he's saying. think more about it, they're wild caught, what time of year is it? Very early spring. which means they hatched in the cold, they grew up in the cold, and are still alive. Now the weather starts warming up, it rains more, so why would they need a diapause later in life when wild caught specimens will be reaching adult as it gets warmer?

 
bla bla bla

@_@

Guys

If you dont know current species , please dont say ********* like this.

Those mantis I offered are AFTER NATURAL DISAPAUSE , they are WILD CAUGHT

How the EMPUSA could get to L5-6 if they not pass disapauses ? Its impossible...

Use ur brains ^^
Check Forum Rules And Watch You Language. Why Are You Getting Mad PossiblyCosting You A Sale By Discussing How Hard They Are?

 
Thats not what he's saying. think more about it, they're wild caught, what time of year is it? Very early spring. which means they hatched in the cold, they grew up in the cold, and are still alive. Now the weather starts warming up, it rains more, so why would they need a diapause later in life when wild caught specimens will be reaching adult as it gets warmer?
No check your facts. IF they diapause they hatch in the FALL and grow very fast to sub adult or pre sub. Then they spend the 2-3 months of winter as sub adult and breed in the spring.

 
Based on the available info, and breeding info I am leaning on these not being as difficult as some have made them out to be. I do understand location being a factor but as far as I know if their region hits a cold snap I could be wrong but given that they may be in locations that do contribute to a diapause and some that dont wouldn't the species be ok with out one in captivity?

 
Last edited by a moderator:
Based on the available info, and breeding info I am leaning on these not being as difficult as some have made them out to be. I do understand location being a factor but as far as I know if their region hits a cold snap I could be wrong but given that they may be in locations that do contribute to a diapause and some that dont wouldn't the species be ok with out one in captivity?
I'd guess after a long line of breeding possibly not, but then again depending on where they are in the world they would never need it. It would be an interesting experiment to see if they would molt in a continuously warm climate

 

Latest posts

Top