infinite213
Well-known member
Would this be a benefit to mantids or would it be too much of a good thing and have a detrimental effect on them?
They probably wouldn't be able to swallow the granules. BUT, you can give them vitamins, particularly B complex, by adding brewer's yeast. It also makes the medium smell kinda yummy.Would this be a benefit to mantids or would it be too much of a good thing and have a detrimental effect on them?
They probably wouldn't be able to swallow the granules. BUT, you can give them vitamins, particularly B complex, by adding brewer's yeast. It also makes the medium smell kinda yummy.Would this be a benefit to mantids or would it be too much of a good thing and have a detrimental effect on them?
Maybe I will test out the vitamins on a select few. If they grow to the size of humans then I definitely wont give them viagra!not really sure, just don't use viagra and then fall asleep. lol :whistling:
sorry Gio, it just popped in my head and I had to say it. ^_^
So your basically saying that if I put Omega 3 Fish Oil in the medium that my mantid still wont be able to beat me in chess? Bummer...Please folks, there is enough craziness in the hobby already without tossing stuff into fly larvae food that the maggots don't need. For one thing if you feed them useless stuff, you are detracting from their total nutrition as well as needlessly raising the cost of your fly productin. I am certain that you could add 6ozs of caviar to the mix without harming the larvae (rinse it first, though, to remove some of that salt) but why would you do such a thing. Food is not love!
As you might expect, I based my own formula -- not at all original, I'm glad to say -- on some of the housefly nutritional studies that are easily found by doing a Google search. Someone, Brian, I think, asked why I stopped using flax seed oil. Simple, when I looked the subject up, I found that it is not indicated, any more than the ground carrot and beaten egg that were recommended from the same source. Flies can survive on almost any rotting proteinaceous food, including feces, but the trick is to get the maximum possible yield from a given amount of food and keeping costs down.
Remember, KISS
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