I tried this with an independent line of Chinese, and the results were pretty much exactly like the video stated. I organized a bit of an experiment, but it is a very small experiment, with only one test group. So scientifically, the results are not accurate, but I think it does a decent job at quantifying the effects of inbreeding. My plan is to start over, with 3-4 test groups. (For the results I describe below, I don’t mention the control group, that is, the breeding of mantids that have a very low possibility of being related. For the control group, I kept only females, and harvested the breeding males from a friend’s house, which was about 10 miles away)
I hatched an ooth back in 2015 (when I first started in the hobby) and I separated a handful of nymphs to test this idea. The first generation parents, (X and Y) were perfectly healthy mantids from the same ooth (which was wild collected, so I assume the parents were not closely related).
When I crossed XY (2016), I got a second generation, and I didn’t notice anything out of the ordinary. Quite a few nymphs died, but no more than normal. I took a few nymphs from that hatch, (XY1 and XY2 - 2017), and bred them. The nymphs that I got from that ooth were also pretty normal, and I didn’t really notice anything different. About the same percentage died.
But I’m his last year, things didn’t go so well. I have much more experience now, so I should have had plenty of nymphs survive, but I did not. Of the three ooths that I hatched (Third generation of nymphs). Between the three ooths, I had about 500 hatch, which is pretty normal. I kept them in the same conditions as the previous two generations, actually a bit better (because of the knowledge I had gained). Of the 500, I kept about 50. I fed them just the same as I fed the previous ones, on wild caught crickets, flies, and some ants (which my chinese mantids never struggled to catch and eat). Of the 50 L1s, only 6 made it to L2. There were only a couple incidents to cannibalism, but that is to be expected. So I had a 88% die off rate, which is Mitch higher than the 40-60% that I’ve experienced with my non-inbred generations. Unfortunately, none of them made it into adulthood, because they all died to either a mismolt or just randomly.
Well, there’s my info on this topic. But like I said, I used a very small test group (of one), so my results are probably very skewed. I will probably test it again in the future, but it will probably be a while. I’ve got to get through college first.
So to answer your question,
@River Dane, my test seems to suggest that inbreeding will eventually result in genetic weakness, at least in Chinese mantids. Hopefully this provides a little clarification, but I hope others, especially long time breeders, will be able to shed some light on some other, exotic species.