Headspace
Well-known member
I lost two adult T. Sinensis females in the last few weeks to identical symptoms.
The problem seems to start with the mantid becoming less alert and losing control of its abdomen. When it hangs, the abdomen seems to hang down freely--not in line with the mantid's body. Eventually the mantid becomes weaker, and its rear legs no longer touch whatever it is hanging from.
In the next few days, the mantid becomes progressively weaker and then dies.
Without fail, the abdomen:
1. Appears bloated
2. Seems cold to the touch
3. Does not react when the cerci are touched.
4. Does not eliminate feces at all, or if it does, they either dribble out or come out in "strings."
The overall indicator that something is seriously wrong is that the mantid stops voluntarily eliminating--it's almost as if the mantid is constipated or the abdomen has "died." I can still see the abdomen pulsing, but nothing else happens.
I'm alarmed that this is happening to my mantids. Has anyone noticed any corrolating (or causative) links to these symptoms?
The problem seems to start with the mantid becoming less alert and losing control of its abdomen. When it hangs, the abdomen seems to hang down freely--not in line with the mantid's body. Eventually the mantid becomes weaker, and its rear legs no longer touch whatever it is hanging from.
In the next few days, the mantid becomes progressively weaker and then dies.
Without fail, the abdomen:
1. Appears bloated
2. Seems cold to the touch
3. Does not react when the cerci are touched.
4. Does not eliminate feces at all, or if it does, they either dribble out or come out in "strings."
The overall indicator that something is seriously wrong is that the mantid stops voluntarily eliminating--it's almost as if the mantid is constipated or the abdomen has "died." I can still see the abdomen pulsing, but nothing else happens.
I'm alarmed that this is happening to my mantids. Has anyone noticed any corrolating (or causative) links to these symptoms?
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