Well, I gathered up some pupas I found in the fall, and I started a colony of local Drosophilia species!
They're way to big to be melanogaster; they have tiger stripes on their abdomens as well. Whatever they are, they produce like MAD. I have a hard time keeping them all in their container, so a few got out and have found some places to reproduce in a few of my soil-based roach colonies.
Anyways, I found a female that couldn't fly the other day (it looks like one of her wings is a stub and the other's a little messed up too) and I separated a male to produce with her. If all goes well, and if this is a genetic trait, soon I should have flightless cultures of this amazing species. The largest females are a little bigger than D. hydei, and the maggots prefer to crawl on the surface of and make craters in their culture medium. In the summer I'll be making a rig that will let me harvest the large maggots (the biggest of which are literally 1/3+ of an inch long) for fish and frog food. A very neat little species, I'd say.
Any comments on the matter? Do you guys think it's a genetic trait or no?
They're way to big to be melanogaster; they have tiger stripes on their abdomens as well. Whatever they are, they produce like MAD. I have a hard time keeping them all in their container, so a few got out and have found some places to reproduce in a few of my soil-based roach colonies.
Anyways, I found a female that couldn't fly the other day (it looks like one of her wings is a stub and the other's a little messed up too) and I separated a male to produce with her. If all goes well, and if this is a genetic trait, soon I should have flightless cultures of this amazing species. The largest females are a little bigger than D. hydei, and the maggots prefer to crawl on the surface of and make craters in their culture medium. In the summer I'll be making a rig that will let me harvest the large maggots (the biggest of which are literally 1/3+ of an inch long) for fish and frog food. A very neat little species, I'd say.
Any comments on the matter? Do you guys think it's a genetic trait or no?