collinchang635
Well-known member
Hope your mantid becomes dark green!
I haven't seen anything shorter than 4 days before. I imagined it could happen but I didn't think it would be of this species. You are feeding her very well?EDIT: the same female laid another ootheca of the same size earlier to day, only 4 days after the first. this brings to mind a topic sometime last year about size of p.wahlbergii ooths. somebody suggested that some females wait longer between laying but lay longer oothecae, while some females (for whatever reason) lay more frequent, shorter oothecae. anyway this is the shortest interval between oothecae i have ever experienced (of any species).
yes, i try to keep all my mantids as well fed as possible (especially mated females, and excluding of course males that i am trying to slow down). maybe it has something to do with the fact she is being kept in a container with one other mated female and one adult male? my girlfriend supposed that laying more, smaller oothecae may be a reaction to the "competition" in the same container? she thought maybe a female that feels unthreatened may be willing to "put more of her eggs in one basket" (if you will) so will lay longer oothecae, than one that feels in some way threatened or that these are not ideal conditions for the young, and so lays more smaller ones in different places to kind of "hedge her bets" or "cover all bases"? this is just COMPLETE SPECUALTION of course, just something we were discussing. it would be nice to get other peoples thoughts.I haven't seen anything shorter than 4 days before. I imagined it could happen but I didn't think it would be of this species. You are feeding her very well?
That's an interesting idea. Amusing that your girlfriend came up with it :lol: I usually keep my mantids seperate, even if communal, so I can't really add anything to your speculation.yes, i try to keep all my mantids as well fed as possible (especially mated females, and excluding of course males that i am trying to slow down). maybe it has something to do with the fact she is being kept in a container with one other mated female and one adult male? my girlfriend supposed that laying more, smaller oothecae may be a reaction to the "competition" in the same container? she thought maybe a female that feels unthreatened may be willing to "put more of her eggs in one basket" (if you will) so will lay longer oothecae, than one that feels in some way threatened or that these are not ideal conditions for the young, and so lays more smaller ones in different places to kind of "hedge her bets" or "cover all bases"? this is just COMPLETE SPECUALTION of course, just something we were discussing. it would be nice to get other peoples thoughts.
:lol: :lol: :lol: LMFAO!!!That's probably because why I like them so much, hehehe
6th instar is sub-adult for the males. The past months I havn't had to bother with gut loading, I've been catching wild food, much better than the same diet over and over again. That will change in a few weeks though, it's beginning to get cool here.You are kinda slow I got mine as L3 or L4 four weeks ago and even the females are just about to turn sub-adult, two males are already sub - gut-loading does the trick
Not yet, my males are sub-adult, but the females are sub-sub.Have you got female's sub-adult wingbuds close up pictures? I'd fancy seeing that.
Enter your email address to join: