What does anyone know about mantis' eating worms, specifically red wriggler earthworms?
I do what I can to help the dragonfly population since they eat mosquitoes, and thus deal with the nile virus thing that was supposed to be an issue a couple years back, plus I hate being bitten/stung/pierced by mosquitoes B)
I had an opportunity to buy a bug catcher that has a light to attract the flying insects and then a fan that blows them into a container, but that was before I was into the hobby. Wish I'd known, or had listened to my instinct. I shoulda known when I kept thinking about it. I was thinking about it for putting on a float and using it for night fishing to attact fish and fish food
I'm new, so all I've used to feed my 3 week old ootheca hatched mantis' is fruit flies and pinhead crickets, so far.
I live in a part of town, old part of town, where roaches can be a problem, but I sprayed well when I moved my office here about 3 months back. I still see an occasional roach, maybe one or two a month, so I would imagine with the roaches trying to find heat, and my neighbor underneath having left, that they'll try moving into his apartment, and eventually migrate up to mine through the walls. When they do they will be mantis chow. I don't plan to be at this location much longer anyway.
I was planning on letting some of the mantis' roam freely in my place when they get large enough.
If they catch an occasional earthworm, from my earthworm bin in the spare bedroom, I won't mind, as long as they don't go killing them off just to kill something.
I plan to talk to the mantis guy at the reptile center in Mesa, but everytime I go there he's off for that day, or just went home.
I have an old hippy buddy across town who's son catches them wild and raises them, then puts them in the yard and keeps them outside as pets, so I'll have to pick his brain, but I'm sure he'll just say they take care of themselves. That's what most hippies would say. I'm kinda still a hippy, but too materialistic to be considered one though. Trying to get back to that serendipity though