SirNovak
Member
Little background:
I have only raised Chinese Mantids, and only been doing it for a little while.
So I found this girl when she was just a little green twig in the late spring,
raised her through all her molting stages, no problems at all. When she did her final molt, and got her wings, they were like.... jutting up....
Mantis 9/28 by SirNovak, on Flickr
And they stayed like that until the day she died (several months later)
At first I thought it was just temporary and that when she flapped her wings they would pop back down, but they never did!
Has anyone seen anything like this before?
Is it a genetic thing? or just a fluke?
I tried once or twice to kind of.... lay them down and she did NOT like that so I just left her alone,it didn't hurt her in anyway, and honestly I think it made her look so much more unique and beautiful.
I wills say though, the male I had captured for her, had ALOT of trouble trying to mount her. He had to do it from the side, was an interesting spectacle.
Here is another snap shot from when she is younger and not preggroz:
overboard by SirNovak, on Flickr
Any insight would be greatly appreciated! (P.S. I kind of hope its genetic cause I think its an awesome trait, if not completely useless in the wild, but I feel like its just a fluke)
-SirNovak
I have only raised Chinese Mantids, and only been doing it for a little while.
So I found this girl when she was just a little green twig in the late spring,
raised her through all her molting stages, no problems at all. When she did her final molt, and got her wings, they were like.... jutting up....
Mantis 9/28 by SirNovak, on Flickr
And they stayed like that until the day she died (several months later)
At first I thought it was just temporary and that when she flapped her wings they would pop back down, but they never did!
Has anyone seen anything like this before?
Is it a genetic thing? or just a fluke?
I tried once or twice to kind of.... lay them down and she did NOT like that so I just left her alone,it didn't hurt her in anyway, and honestly I think it made her look so much more unique and beautiful.
I wills say though, the male I had captured for her, had ALOT of trouble trying to mount her. He had to do it from the side, was an interesting spectacle.
Here is another snap shot from when she is younger and not preggroz:
overboard by SirNovak, on Flickr
Any insight would be greatly appreciated! (P.S. I kind of hope its genetic cause I think its an awesome trait, if not completely useless in the wild, but I feel like its just a fluke)
-SirNovak