thesexymantisboy
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On my mantis's front leg the little end where he walks on is gone. Will it regrow?
what instar is it>?On my mantis's front leg the little end where he walks on is gone. Will it regrow?
by this reasoning, would you be happier if people began saying "I4" and "I5"?L-whatever is used by germany that side of europe what ever it is, its a shortened larven i think if i remember rightly, ands its thier saying of instar, whole different language, instar - us, larven - them, so we should really stick to instar, you dont always say syonara to everyone do u
Oh, that is what the L stands for. I always thought L=level... like mantises were some random participants in a video game and needed to level up. :lol:by this reasoning, would you be happier if people began saying "I4" and "I5"?i dont agree with the idea that we should use the word instar instead of the letter L just because one is english and the other is german. we may not go around saying syonara to everyone, but neither do we go around saying "larven 5" (for example). we use L probably just because it is a shorthand for instar. if someone says to us "Hymenopus coronatus L5", we know that this means a fifth instar Hymenopus coronatus nymph. i would bet that most people who use "L5" probably don't know what word the L is short for but DO know what it means in regards to a mantis' age. this should show that this is not an issue of language, but rather one of shorthand.
i thought it meant level too. what does instar mean anyway. nothing in english certainly. maybe its french or... german. L=larven is more meaningful than instar. the word has the same origin within the related languages ie larven =larvae :lol:Oh, that is what the L stands for. I always thought L=level... like mantises were some random participants in a video game and needed to level up. :lol:
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