Hercules Beetle, DYNASTES HERCULES ssp. HERCULES

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[01.06.15]

I saw a worm in one of the pots containing the eggs so I tipped the substrate out and saw that two eggs have already hatched.

The one in the first 2 photos hatched recently while the one in the 1st photo must have hatched sometime in the last 3 days as it's head capsule already has some colour to it and I can see some substrate in its gut. :)

IMG_4240 by Richard Nakamura, on Flickr
IMG_4241 by Richard Nakamura, on Flickr
IMG_4248 by Richard Nakamura, on Flickr
IMG_4247 by Richard Nakamura, on Flickr
 
[04.06.15]

A female in the progress of laying an egg/compacting some substrate. :D

In the Dynastes hercules thread on Bugnation:
....maybe thats what they do. dig a vertical tunnel, lay an egg, come up, move to another spot on the rotten log.
...the description that you (agrius) give is the typical egg laying behaviour. Usually females tend to wander around in the substrate digging until they find adequate egg laying locations. They use their hind legs and body to compact the substrate around each egg after laying it.
IMG_4297 by Richard Nakamura, on Flickr
 
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[08.06.15]

Just tidied everything up... and from one female over the course of 3 weeks, I've had a total of 45 eggs laid so far.

3 larvae (separated from the rest at the bottom), 39 eggs and 4 others I accidentally squashed as they were freshly laid and very fragile.

IMG_4474 by Richard Nakamura, on Flickr
 
[16.06.15]

Here's my male (98mm when his thoracic horn was still intact) in comparison to a plastic copy of another male which was approx 145mm which I got in Japan just over a decade ago.

What a massive difference. :)

IMG_4568 by Richard Nakamura, on Flickr
 
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[21.10.15]

I ordered another adult pair (different bloodline) from Japan 2 weeks ago in the hopes of mixing some blood when the offspring of both mature. The parcel was however redirected to APHA last week and was finally able to collect the pair today from Heathrow airport with quite a hefty fee.

The good news is that the pair is still alive and kicking so fingers crossed that they weren't weakened too much from the long journey!

Unboxing video:



 
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[23.10.15]

Here's a video of the adult male in which he started feeling the texture of my watch and mistook it for another species of Coleoptera! :laugh:



 

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