bugboymark
Well-known member
Thought I would throw this out there to see if anyone else has a similar experience...
Raised a handful of native Carolina mantises I found in Davenport, IA. 4 nymphs I collected in late July. Three of them grew and matured normally. 3 of the 4 molted to adulthood by mid-late August. One male and two females. Fortunately, the male was pretty virile and mated at least once with each female. After living "a good life", he died (probably of exhaustion!) two weeks ago. Both females are still alive and I have 5 ooths between them so far. The odd thing is mantis #4. He was about the same size as the other three when I caught him in July. No physical deformities. Ate and acted normally the whole time. But he just finally molted to adulthood this morning! First day of November! I'm guessing its just an anomaly and it happens in nature (though I'm sure he never would have reached adulthood had he been left outdoors). Anyone else with experience raising local/native species seen this? Over 30 years of raising Chinese and Carolinas...and this is a first for me.
Unfortunately for him, both of my females seem to be winding down after all the ooth laying. So I think this late-bloomer is SOL when it comes to breeding. Sometimes slow and steady does NOT win the race!
Raised a handful of native Carolina mantises I found in Davenport, IA. 4 nymphs I collected in late July. Three of them grew and matured normally. 3 of the 4 molted to adulthood by mid-late August. One male and two females. Fortunately, the male was pretty virile and mated at least once with each female. After living "a good life", he died (probably of exhaustion!) two weeks ago. Both females are still alive and I have 5 ooths between them so far. The odd thing is mantis #4. He was about the same size as the other three when I caught him in July. No physical deformities. Ate and acted normally the whole time. But he just finally molted to adulthood this morning! First day of November! I'm guessing its just an anomaly and it happens in nature (though I'm sure he never would have reached adulthood had he been left outdoors). Anyone else with experience raising local/native species seen this? Over 30 years of raising Chinese and Carolinas...and this is a first for me.
Unfortunately for him, both of my females seem to be winding down after all the ooth laying. So I think this late-bloomer is SOL when it comes to breeding. Sometimes slow and steady does NOT win the race!