Opivy
Well-known member
Been expecting my giant shield to molt, and just now looking inside his cup theres a little tiny worm - Anyone know what this is? It takes one little step at a time. Should I be concerned?
Hm...have you fed your mantid any butterflies/moths lately? For me, when moths come to the backyard light at night, I capture them and feed them to my mantids (I leave alone the beautiful looking moths though to populate my backyard i.e. sphinx moth ). Upon getting captured and eaten, the moths would drop it's eggs to the bottom. After a few days, these tiny worms/caterpillars would hatch and they walk like how you explained. That's the only way how I see tiny worms in my mantid cage. If you haven't fed your mantids any moths lately, then I don't know what it is.Been expecting my giant shield to molt, and just now looking inside his cup theres a little tiny worm - Anyone know what this is? It takes one little step at a time. Should I be concerned?
I found the exact same thing today. :huh: They look like tiny maggots, it's really kinda creepy. They couldn't be the flies larvae, could it?I had a similar event occur the other day. My budwing caught a house fly and I guess only ate the head (not even the legs). When I checked on her, there was a disembodied fly abdomen on the floor below the mantis with several very tiny white worm things inching around like your description, but the fly abdomen itself was also filled with them. It was pretty gross. My mantis seems to have understood that it might not have been a good idea to eat them all, though. Parasites, maybe? Uck. I can't figure out how that fly was still alive with all that gross inside of it.
Not larvae. They'd have to be parasites, but in my (very) limited experience, I have only come across parasites (wasps) that paraitize the flies' pupae. These are much better for the parasite, because they stay in one place, while a dying fly could drown, taking the parasites with it, but some parasites won't read and never learn. Anyone know more about this?I found the exact same thing today. :huh: They look like tiny maggots, it's really kinda creepy. They couldn't be the flies larvae, could it?
Maybe Muscidifurax zaraptor, Spanglia spp., or something like that? The larvae are about the same size as fruit fly larvae. The fly probably emerged from it's pupal stage before the parasites hatched from there eggs. I never knew that there are such tiny wasps.Not larvae. They'd have to be parasites, but in my (very) limited experience, I have only come across parasites (wasps) that paraitize the flies' pupae. These are much better for the parasite, because they stay in one place, while a dying fly could drown, taking the parasites with it, but some parasites won't read and never learn. Anyone know more about this?
This is really nicely worked out and parts of it are correct. Tachinid flies (or at least some, including the ones you mentioned) are ovoviviporous (Zephyr talked about this a while back, re. cockroaches). This doesn't mean that they carry their "babies" around inside them like a bunch of fetuses, but rather that the larva develops almost completely inside the egg and can break out of its egg case on hatching. The easiest way to see this is to watch a pregnant guppy or swordtail laying eggs. As each egg falls to the bottom of the tank, a tiny fish breaks out of the "shell" and swims away. So if the house fly was parasitized, it was not through its GI tract. Superfreak pointed out elsewhere, today, that almost (there's always an exception somewhere) no insect eggs can survive the host's digestive system. In mantids and a number of other insects, the food is bound in a chitinous sac (peritrophic membrane) that squeezes out anything digestible and disposes of the rest. Nematodes, as she suggested, can survive in both vertebrate and invertebrate GI tracts, but they live off the partially digested food in the gut and seldom destroy the host, which is the difference between a parasite and a parasitoid. When you find an insect with its abdomen full of icky maggots, they are living in the abdomen and feeding off the insect's fat and protein, not in the gut. It is true that some herbivores eat the eggs of tachinid flies, but they quickly hatch, often into a planidium (c.f.) as you saw, and, I assume, eat their way out of the insect's gut and into its tissues before they can be digested.After learning a few new facts about flies today, I do think the little maggots were the flies own larva. There was a dead mouse in my yard today, and I watched a fly deposit several eggs on it, but they weren't actually eggs. When I looked a little closer, I could see that the "eggs" were burrowing down into the mouses fur. She was depositing live larva. So my final conclusion is that, the fly my mantis ate with the abdomen filled with maggots was not a housefly hosting a bunch of parasites, but a flesh fly, such as, Sarcophaga vomitoria(nice name :blink: ), or Sarcophaga carnaria, and was merely pregnant.
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