joossa
Well-known member
WOW. Lots of mantids!
I am surprised to see how many specimens are so poorly pinned/spread.
I am surprised to see how many specimens are so poorly pinned/spread.
I had done some pinned collection for mantis before, it is time consuming if you want to keep a nicely display specimen, especially with insect like mantis. Positioning of the mantis alone take a week at least. I like to have one set of the wing strecthed out too, as the pic below.yer..aint there other way or is this how u suppose to do it>?
Thanks Orin. I don't have a vernier caliper. Actually I didn't even bring a ruler, but a guy had a swiss knive set with a steel ruler where he measured that long African stick mantis to be 6 inches. I didn't take the picture with the measurement toegther as he took his "ruler" away by then. He also measured one of the large green mantis around 5+ inches too before leaving. i didn't measure any of the B. borealis but none of them were very long, my guess is around 4 inches, although i have seen a live one that is longer.Great batch of photos Yen! Would you be allowed to get vernier calipers close enough to get reasonable measurements on say, the biggest B. borealis or the five or six inch mantids next open house?It look like that Oligonicella mexicana male ate the head off the one next to him. :blink:
This specimen is by no means a Heterochaeta. I've already IDed it as Macrodanuria elongata. Even if the label was false and it is from E Africa, it clearly belongs to the Danuriini. Heterochaeta looks different.The large mantis might be a Heretochaeta sp (poss H strachani) It looks a lot like the one I had a few years back.
Yeah it is the old photo joossa, thought of keeping the dead one in pinned collection but realized it was impossible when my mantis collection gets out of hand. Glad it helped. Spreading both set of wings certainly makes the specimen looks nicer and larger too if you still looking for dead specimen let me know i have been giving many dead specimen away.Hey Yen, I remember that picture from when I barely began researching how to spread and pin. It was very helpful. I agree that it is time consuming... not to mention that you have to be dexterous. In the end though, it is well worth it.Personally I like spread both set of wings. Some of my specimens look awesome with the full-wing display. I guess it is more standard to spread only one wing set, though. For observational purposes.
Thanks FT, if you plan to visit Texas let me know the curator in TAMU let me visit the collection room anytime as long as It doesn't interfere with the class work there.HELLO Yen and allNice pics and nice collection!!!!
The large mantis might be a Heretochaeta sp (poss H strachani) It looks a lot like the one I had a few years back.
I also see lots of Phasmids mixed in the mantis boxes.
regards
francisco T
Mike, i sent you the uncut version, you sould see more detail of each L. minor in that pic. Hope that help.Hey Yen,Any chance you could send me a blow up of the L. minor try? I'm always looking for more photos/info on the native ground mantids!
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