SkittishMale
Well-known member
I hatched out a wild-collected Mantis religiosa ootheca that I collected last Autumn and had stored in the refrigerator at 5 degrees Celsius. It was put in the fridge in the first week of October and was taken out to incubate on the 5th of January. It hatched right after 4 weeks of incubating at room temperature. What I found odd was that they didn't all hatch at once and instead, some hatched each day for most of the week. I started with roughly 80 or so nymphs after it hatched and they were given D. melanogaster and D. hedei fruitflies. Most died and now I only have around 10 nymphs left and they look like they're ready to molt to second instar hopefully.
My two questions are, why didn't the babies hatch simultaneously? and why did almost all of them die? I am aware that many of the hatchlings of this species, like many other mantises that hatch large amounts of nymphs, die or eat each other soon after hatching. I've raised this species before a number of times and never had this many die in first instar. Even some of the mantises that fed with visible size put on their abdomens died too. Was it just a bad ootheca I collected? Has anyone else had an ooth where almost every mantis died?
My two questions are, why didn't the babies hatch simultaneously? and why did almost all of them die? I am aware that many of the hatchlings of this species, like many other mantises that hatch large amounts of nymphs, die or eat each other soon after hatching. I've raised this species before a number of times and never had this many die in first instar. Even some of the mantises that fed with visible size put on their abdomens died too. Was it just a bad ootheca I collected? Has anyone else had an ooth where almost every mantis died?
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