LLCoolJew
Well-known member
Wow... good stuff! Thanks!!! I will just keep feeding her and see what happens!!!!
XO,
LL
XO,
LL
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Agreeded. We all manage things according to the standards we choose. Those that I choose I stated above. Everyone sees things differently. "quality of life" I guess we all have our definition. And the bugs are at the mercy of our decisions/definitionsI would suggest, knowing that this may cost me my life, that keeping mantids is first and last about the owner's needs and desires. We buy and raise mantids and daily give them other insects, sometimes even vertebrates, that they slowly eat alive. What about the prey's needs and desires and "quality of life", whatever that means? KK (and i'm still yr biggest fan! ) suggests that the mantis in question "wants to live". By that reasoning, doesn't the fly or bee impaled on the mantis's claws want to live as it is being devoured? I'm sure that it wants to live as much as the mantis, but I'm equally sure that none of us cares. Or how about the male mantis that is similarly devoured during mating? We could prevent this by not mating our adults, but we would rather have a fertile female than a live male. Our choice, again, not his. So yes, mantids tend to live at our pleasure and die of old age, misfortune or our mismanagement, nothing more and nothing less.
I have euthanized several of my pets over the years though I've never done so by sticking them in the freezer.I think people jump to the freezer idea because at some point it becomes more about our wants and desires over the mantis. Quality of life plays into this. I don't own the bug so i can't speak for it, But I would rather freeze than to let suffer slowly.
Don't worry your post won't cost you your life, just your head. Interestingly I am one of those people that often skips mating because I don't want to risk my boys. Of course then there is the other part of me that questions what the boys would want. Most seem pretty eager to take the risk if left to their own devices. Of course us silly humans like to empathize toward critters the way it suits us best. We also tend to emphasize from the perspective of a human because well most of us at least on here are humans. Sure I could quickly kill my crickets before feeding to lessen their suffering but I don't because I really dislike doing it even though I have in the past for injured mantises and hand rearing song birds.I would suggest, knowing that this may cost me my life, that keeping mantids is first and last about the owner's needs and desires.
Sorry to hear that. I know exactly how you feel having gone through this myself. I put so much time and care into hand feeding between molts. It really hurt. And then the Idolo thing on top of this.Thanks everyone! Tried to keep a close eye on her to catch the molt, but went for a run, came back, and it was already in progress. She didn't make it. Bummer
WHAT?????????? NO!Do not do this,EVER!I had one of my chinese nymphs die from getting stuck to scotch tape,could you imagine what superglue would do?!Also don't kill him.It's not worth it.She should be sort of back to normal after she molts 1 or 2 more times.Although nothing as severe as what happened to your nymph has happened to mine, I have had nymphs with disfigured legs, antennae and so on that are fine after 1 molt.Let me know how she's doing.Could you perhaps secure it to the lid of the container with superglue and feed her via tongs until its ready to molt?
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