I describe my setup below, but if anyone knows anything I should add/change/do to make them breed more and be a self-sustaining colony I would greatly appreciate it.
I have looked for books on the topic too, but it seems most are expensive collector priced out-of-print ones, tiny eBook reader versions, or such -- very little detail is really found online besides the very basics.
Well I was keeping crickets to feed my adult mantis. Of course if any crickets laid eggs and hatched, great as it would be less crickets to buy. Well my adult mantis died about a month ago but I kept up their maintenance.
After several months of crickets laying eggs in the "dirt" container (since late October) that I have setup, finally some have hatched lately. I've kept it plenty damp, but it seems what finally allowed some to hatch was the addition of a heating pad. They are so tiny (see images below) that they are barely larger than Springtails and wouldn't make much of a meal for my mantis nymphs right now even if I could catch them without squishing them.
As I know if the crickets are raised by me I do not have to worry about diseases/sickness/feeding problems when using them as feeders for my mantises versus the common problems that occur from pet store stock.
The crickets are housed in a tall 35 gallon "breeder" aquarium with a mesh reptile lid. The crickets are unable to climb the glass so the lid acts more as insurance for my family. I buy fresh egg crates from a local farm supply store for $0.50 each, and change them as needed.
The heating pad is set on a 24 hour timer, and stays on 45 minutes, off 15 minutes, repeating (to allow the pad to cool some, and avoid the auto 1 hour pad shut-off). Anyway the heating pad is on the right-side of my cricket tank to ensure the egg "dirt" container stays warm, and if the crickets get too hot they can escape to the room temperature left-side of the tank.
I feed them various fruit and vegetables as I buy them, they get scraps or at times specially bought just for them. Out of everything I've fed them they seem to prefer apples. They also eat a custom mix of powered dry food I make them, and they seem to love it.
I have a colony of thriving Springtails in their "dirt" container, I figure the crickets can use them as feeders and they help keep the tank clean. I also have a lots of Isopods (sow/pill/woodlouse/roly-poly/etc) in there as well to clean the tank. The Isopods like to bury themselves in the "dirt" container and at times the self-waterers. I haven't noticed the Springtails or Isopods annoying the crickets at all, and the female crickets will lay eggs with either even beside her.
They are watered by the water misting I do often, and by two self watering devices I made (they use them often). Also to help with humidity and for them to walk around, I did a thin (1/8") layer of coconut fiber substrate. As it is so thin they only lay their eggs in the large "dirt" container.
That is it in a nutshell, and I posted pictures of it below too. If anyone knows anything that will help it would be grateful. So far it seems I was just missing the heating pad.
I have looked for books on the topic too, but it seems most are expensive collector priced out-of-print ones, tiny eBook reader versions, or such -- very little detail is really found online besides the very basics.
Well I was keeping crickets to feed my adult mantis. Of course if any crickets laid eggs and hatched, great as it would be less crickets to buy. Well my adult mantis died about a month ago but I kept up their maintenance.
After several months of crickets laying eggs in the "dirt" container (since late October) that I have setup, finally some have hatched lately. I've kept it plenty damp, but it seems what finally allowed some to hatch was the addition of a heating pad. They are so tiny (see images below) that they are barely larger than Springtails and wouldn't make much of a meal for my mantis nymphs right now even if I could catch them without squishing them.
As I know if the crickets are raised by me I do not have to worry about diseases/sickness/feeding problems when using them as feeders for my mantises versus the common problems that occur from pet store stock.
The crickets are housed in a tall 35 gallon "breeder" aquarium with a mesh reptile lid. The crickets are unable to climb the glass so the lid acts more as insurance for my family. I buy fresh egg crates from a local farm supply store for $0.50 each, and change them as needed.
The heating pad is set on a 24 hour timer, and stays on 45 minutes, off 15 minutes, repeating (to allow the pad to cool some, and avoid the auto 1 hour pad shut-off). Anyway the heating pad is on the right-side of my cricket tank to ensure the egg "dirt" container stays warm, and if the crickets get too hot they can escape to the room temperature left-side of the tank.
I feed them various fruit and vegetables as I buy them, they get scraps or at times specially bought just for them. Out of everything I've fed them they seem to prefer apples. They also eat a custom mix of powered dry food I make them, and they seem to love it.
I have a colony of thriving Springtails in their "dirt" container, I figure the crickets can use them as feeders and they help keep the tank clean. I also have a lots of Isopods (sow/pill/woodlouse/roly-poly/etc) in there as well to clean the tank. The Isopods like to bury themselves in the "dirt" container and at times the self-waterers. I haven't noticed the Springtails or Isopods annoying the crickets at all, and the female crickets will lay eggs with either even beside her.
They are watered by the water misting I do often, and by two self watering devices I made (they use them often). Also to help with humidity and for them to walk around, I did a thin (1/8") layer of coconut fiber substrate. As it is so thin they only lay their eggs in the large "dirt" container.
That is it in a nutshell, and I posted pictures of it below too. If anyone knows anything that will help it would be grateful. So far it seems I was just missing the heating pad.
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