tenoderaterror
Active member
Okay. My T. Sinensis was out on my finger and had the usual light brown color. I noticed that she looked hungry, so I got out a cricket.
Then, I put her in a smaller enclosure with the cricket, but when the cricket was just out of strike range, I noticed that her color had changed to a more purplish shade of shale. They were only in there about two minutes, so that was really quick, and I hadn't moved the enclosure, so lighting can't be a factor. Also, I had looked at my mantis when she was just hanging around, and she looked brown.
Then, I put her in a smaller enclosure with the cricket, but when the cricket was just out of strike range, I noticed that her color had changed to a more purplish shade of shale. They were only in there about two minutes, so that was really quick, and I hadn't moved the enclosure, so lighting can't be a factor. Also, I had looked at my mantis when she was just hanging around, and she looked brown.
Keegan