Orchid mantis POLL

Mantidforum

Help Support Mantidforum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

Which is more worth? Orchid nymphs or 1cm of orchid ooth? Note that, shipping may take awhile as sel

  • 1 cm orchid ooth - $30

    Votes: 3 30.0%
  • 3 orchid nymphs - $24

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • 4 orchid nymphs - $32

    Votes: 7 70.0%

  • Total voters
    10
also, i saw that you mentioned why the fertility rates of orchids are so low, due to inbreeding. is that the breeding of different species? 
No, just breeding the same lines over and over.  Orchid female with a male of same bloodline.  Usually takes many generations in insects for that to be an issue though, but you can breed many generations of orchids in just a few years.  Not sure how many it takes.

 
No, just breeding the same lines over and over.  Orchid female with a male of same bloodline.  Usually takes many generations in insects for that to be an issue though, but you can breed many generations of orchids in just a few years.  Not sure how many it takes.
ill just have new males from someone else hopefully every year

 
I've heard that orchids do badly with inbreeding. Yen said it's around 3 generations. I've probably already hit my max so that's why I'm adding new blood to my stock. I should've been adding fresh blood every year. 

Over the generations, I have seen a decline in the percentage of ooths from mated females that actually turned out to be fertilized. But interestingly, with each successive generation, I've also seen an increase in hatch size (up to 113 from an ooth from my 3rd generation). That might seem counterintuitive to the effects of inbreeding, but there's a catch: my 3rd generation, I've seen a sudden increase in L1 mortality rates. So my assumption, based on my limited experience, is that inbreeding for multiple generations lowers the % of actual fertile ooths and increases mortality rates.

 

Latest posts

Top