I don't think that there would be enough hobbists in the world to keep a breeding population of most species!Sadly most mantis species are not in culture.
I think that these guys are from Ecuador.if we can get malaysian orchid mantids in the US, how can we not get moss mantids from malaysia? lol.
i hope someone from malaysia on the site, stumbles upon this thread & offers to sell me a moss mantis.
hmm..I think that these guys are from Ecuador.
We are more likely to get African and Asian mantids in culture because the natives like to collect and sell them to us.
There aren't many south American mantids in US culture.
It might be a scam, because I don't know how you would find a moss mantis in Malaysia. They're in south america, maybe some parts of central america too.hmm..
there's this guy from malaysia, on another forum (i'm trying to contact) that posted a thread about him finding three moss mantids.
i just went by his location, so, i assumed they were from malaysia.. if that is the case & he is willing to sell them, would it be ideal to try it out?
i'm guessing it would be a pain to care for them, since, they are pretty much "wild" & no one knows much about "caring" for them?
This one, for starters!Very cool looking mantis. Googled it and it says it is from ecuador. What other species do they have in south America?
Do you know which forum members have them? Did they make threads about them? I'd love to see their progress!They have been in the US and are now, sooner or later they will establish themselves here if people work at it.
Would it really be too hard to smuggle an ooth? I'm likely minoring in Spanish, so I'll need to live in a South Anerican country for awhile.Insects which are illegal to export out of South and Central America aren't all too easy to smuggle, just like Australia... Many of these illegal bugs come from Asia and Africa. If Central/South America and Australia weren't so dang strict, this hobby would be filled with way more cooler bugs!
They had a special on insects of the amazon and the way they kill their prey and the moss mantis was one of the stars! This was on some science channel a few months back!
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