ellroy
Well-known member
I recently read a scientific paper called 'Pollen feeding and fitness in praying mantids: the vegetarian side of a tritrophic predator.' It was a study carried out in 2003 on Chinese mantis Tenodera aridfolia sinensis where they observed nymphs actively feeding on pollen after hatching and increased fitness in adults feeding on pollen-laden insects. They also noted higher fertility in females located on flowers.
I'm not suggesting we all start converting our mantids to a pollen diet but it does perhaps imply that dusting food with some kind of supplement may be beneficial, particularly for breeding females. I would imagine that some of the specialist supplements may include some pollen. (I think some of the crested gecko supplements may include pollen???)
Cheers
Alan
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Reference: Pollen feeding and fitness in praying mantids: the vegetarian side of a tritrophic predator (2003). ENVIRONMENTAL ENTOMOLOGY
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I'm not suggesting we all start converting our mantids to a pollen diet but it does perhaps imply that dusting food with some kind of supplement may be beneficial, particularly for breeding females. I would imagine that some of the specialist supplements may include some pollen. (I think some of the crested gecko supplements may include pollen???)
Cheers
Alan
[SIZE=8pt][/SIZE]
Reference: Pollen feeding and fitness in praying mantids: the vegetarian side of a tritrophic predator (2003). ENVIRONMENTAL ENTOMOLOGY
_________________