brm
New member
I am looking to breed mantids in the future and was wondering what species are easy to breed and how do i go about doing it? as well as ootheca care?
Thanks a lot.
Thanks a lot.
Yeah, depending on which coast you live on. If you're on the east coast, there are a couple of Australian members who advertize their oziness in their taglines.I think you need one of the Australian members to chime in here. I'd suggest a local species as your first attempt. That way you already live in the climate that they need, and if anything goes wrong like with your food supply...you can responsibly release it to feed itself.Welcome to the forum!
well i have kept african, madagascan and chinese mantids in the past all of which i loved keeping.I was reeding this and wonderd if you could breed a brother and sister when they grow up?
Yes.I was reeding this and wonderd if you could breed a brother and sister when they grow up?
Oh! East Anglia! Home of the Norfolk Broads! :lol:well i have kept african, madagascan and chinese mantids in the past all of which i loved keeping.i dont live in australia i am simply an australian in another mans body.
Whooops! :lol:Oh! East Anglia! Home of the Norfolk Broads! :lol: You're trying to confuse me again, Kamakiri! Just because it's so easy!
:lol:That was one thing i never thought i would type and then be glad to get a yes.....
Signature says:Where'd you get that he was Australian from? Left me thoroughly confused it did!Anyway, welcome to the forum!
can i not be enthusiastic about Australian animals and not live there? <_<Signature says:"Australian Animal Enthusiast"
Should have looked up East Anglia!
Soitenly!can i not be enthusiastic about Australian animals and not live there? <_<
Wow... I didn't know that. Hey, I wonder how they got there? Makes me think it could be an example for the proponents of H.R. 669! :blink: :lol:Soitenly! I for one, love wallabies (sp?). Did anyone know (Phil) that there's a wild population of them in Honolulu?
You bet it is! I don't think that its's a coincidence that over 20% of the Majority members of the Committee on Natural Resources that proposed this bill are from islands, including Hawaii. In every case, though, the ecological devastation of these tiny ecosystems was due to colonization by man, or more properly, Americans and Europeans. Draconian legislation in the US mainland will not bring back what they have lost, and the ecosystems that comprise the US have not and will not suffer the same fate because someone keeps a bearded dragon, a parakeet and four mantids. :angry:Wow... I didn't know that. Hey, I wonder how they got there? Makes me think it could be an example for the proponents of H.R. 669! :blink: :lol:
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