I have a couple of nymphs. I put 3-4 fly pupae in each of their containers, but the pupae still haven't hatched. It's been about 48 hours now and I'm worried 'cause they haven't eaten anything in a few days. Advice?
Well, I put 3-4 pupae in each mantid container. The house is at 70 degrees all the time.Fly pupa can take different amounts of time to hatch depending on the temperature. I had this problem last winter too with my fly pupa, many of them didn't hatch for a while or didn't ever hatch. But if you raise the temperature you will probably have higher success. You could also try hatching the pupa in a different container, maybe that is warmer, and then transfer them to the mantis cages, though carefully as flies are master escape artists!
How warm are the containers? Are the fly pupa being kept in the refrigerator until they need to be used?
Your mantises should be fine, they can go a few days without eating. In the wild they don't eat every day either. At 70 degrees the pupa should hatch in a few days. Though I find house fly pupa sometimes don't hatch at all or take longer then you would think.Well, I put 3-4 pupae in each mantid container. The house is at 70 degrees all the time.
I took a bunch more and put them in a separate container tonight and I can put that wherever. The rest of them are in the fridge.
I'm just so worried, as they haven't had anything to eat for 48 hours now. Should I go and try and get them some tiny crickets?
Since I like to feed my flies before feeding anyways I find it is helpful just to hatch the flies in a separate cage and put a fly or two in when I want to feed. If you shine a light where the mantis is sitting, the flies usually fly there and the mantises tend to catch them within minutes. Then you don't have to worry about having a bunch of loose flies puttering around when you want to take your mantises out later.I've come to realize that feeding flies is really annoying. I can't take my mantids out and handle them while there are live flies in there....because flies *fly*.
First world mantis owner problems, I know.
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