pedro92
Well-known member
About 5 or so nymphs have died off in the last few days they hatched a week ago. I have been feeding them and they are lookin good but then ocassionally i see one on the ground dead why is this
humidity is not usually a big problem unless moulting is involved. i doubt the temperature is wrong either as it would have to be pretty cold for them to die from it and i doubt it is. are you giving them d.hydeii? maybe trying d.melanogaster might help. however it might also be the case that these are just the weaker few from that ootheca. it is quite common to lose a few hatchlings before second instar.Im not sure of temps i will need to tell you temps late. Humidity was prolly to low. maybe about 40% i redid the humidity. Also there in a 32 oz deli cup from rebecca with humidity foam and bamboo skewers. I will throw in more food. I have 5 cups and 6 nymphs in each. I remade more cups with excelsior instead of sticks.
Well chinese and p.w are two totally different mantids. They both require different conditions. I am not sure what the highest mortality rate is. I just hear p.w's are a tricky species.I have an egg case of Chinese mantis produced approx. 80 nymphs hatching 2 weeks ago. The first week, about 10 of them died. I kept track on all accountable bodies, and thus far, I have 25 died. I even found dead ones after they molted into L2 nymph. I figure it is the law of "survival of the fittest". By the way, I do feed and keep them well. I have tried two types of housing: First, all of them in one 12 x 12 butterfly container, and second, three in one 8oz container. I found bodies in both housings. I figure that the weak ones will die no matter what. My policy is that I do not sell or purchase L1 nymphs, even new L2 are very risky. What is my fellow experts' experience? Species to species, what % would you say is the mortality or survival rate?
I am and have been using d. melanogaster FF. I just will put alot more FF in there to ensure all of them eat.humidity is not usually a big problem unless moulting is involved. i doubt the temperature is wrong either as it would have to be pretty cold for them to die from it and i doubt it is. are you giving them d.hydeii? maybe trying d.melanogaster might help. however it might also be the case that these are just the weaker few from that ootheca. it is quite common to lose a few hatchlings before second instar.
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