Dwaink
Well-known member
Hi,
I was just wondering if it is legal to raise Blaptica dubia roaches in the united states?
Regards
I was just wondering if it is legal to raise Blaptica dubia roaches in the united states?
Regards
They are bought and sold all over (I recently got some from Katt) so there doesn't appear to a problem. Cockroaches, though, perhaps more than any other order, have a great capacity for escaping and establishing themselves in the wild. A good example is the Turkestan roach, Blatta lateralis. If you check a care sheet on this roach, you will find that it needs a temp of F80+ (C27+) and high humidity. However, it has become established along the S.W. U.S. border where the humidity is notoriously low and fall/winter temps normally drop into the low seventies or lower.Hi,I was just wondering if it is legal to raise Blaptica dubia roaches in the united states?
Regards
Ha ha ha -.- <_< :lol: , as for the roaches, I'm sure they're legal, they sell them at reptile stores , at least mine anyway.They are bought and sold all over (I recently got some from Katt) so there doesn't appear to a problem. Cockroaches, though, perhaps more than any other order, have a great capacity for escaping and establishing themselves in the wild. A good example is the Turkestan roach, Blatta lateralis. If you check a care sheet on this roach, you will find that it needs a temp of F80+ (C27+) and high humidity. However, it has become established along the S.W. U.S. border where the humidity is notoriously low and fall/winter temps normally drop into the low seventies or lower.BTW, B. lateralis is also a good example of Gloger's Rule. Captive roaches, kept under hot, humid conditions, are very dark, while those living in the S.W. desert are quite pale. (There you go, lemmiwinks!).
Sorry, what was yr question again? :lol:
lemme doubt about the fact you ever had dubias buddylast i checked up on it only hissing cockroaches were on the list of legal exotic roaches. the USDA considers anything that eats plant matter(living or dead) a pest species...maybe they are OK now its been a while but either way i doubt they would raided you for just dubia...do you only want to feed legal roaches to your probably illegal mantis? :lol:
but just so you know dubia take forever to grow and to breed in my experience and i despise them now....not to mention the nasty musk they let out when you grab em
[SIZE=14pt]ya they do have a sweet musk I think it not as bad as others or crickets, but they like furit that gets me, but my hisser make babys like hood-rat mommas "ha ha ha" and they have a sweetish smell too.[/SIZE]dude they musk dont lie....your only saying that for the sake of well...your screen name/sales no need to lie to the people....THEY MUSK!
Considering I know of a few VERY reputable pet stores that sell Dubias, it most certainly is. I've been buying the Dubias I use at home and at work from a breeder in Indiana, and they are so wonderfully easy to take care of. Watch out if fruit flies move into your colony, though! My roommate's Dubia colony met with a very messy end when fruit flies decided they liked the roaches' food... and possibly the roaches AS food (we're not sure if the fruit fly maggots were eating the roaches, or if they had brought in a disease, but either way, the Dubias ended up very much dead). I almost lost my colony at work to the same infestation, but fortunately I caught it in time and was able to eradicate the flies.I was just wondering if it is legal to raise Blaptica dubia roaches in the united states?
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