Showing posts with label Alaus melanops. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alaus melanops. Show all posts

Monday, August 21, 2017

Click Beetles & Roaches

The last adult from my original Pyrophorus noctilucus trio has fully hardened and is now active!! 😁(Actually it emerged from it's pupal cell on the 18th, but it's just taken me this long to get around to posting about it). This last adult was the largest so far, at about 28 mm. Here's hoping I'll be getting some offspring from them soon!

I took photos of the two largest individuals next to my Alaus melanops, here they are:




And I also made a video of all three of my Pyrophorus adults together:


My other two Pyrophorus grubs are still doing well, I am having a few grain mite problems though, for some reason grain mites LOVE their enclosures, but leave my other Elaterid larvae deli cups alone. 😕

Gonna have to lower the amount of chick feed I give them and replace it with mealworms for a while, since there won't be as much leftovers with just mealworms, and the mites seem a little more attracted to old grain products than insect bodies.

My Arenivaga floridensis males are all starting to mature, unfortunately the pre-subadult females don't seem like they will mature in time for these males to mate with them. 😟 Oh well, there are plenty of other smaller nymphs, several of which are likely males, so I'll definitely have pairs matched up at one point.

Here are some pictures of one of the adult males:






The males of this morph look very nice! 😃 Can't wait until the females start maturing too!

My Eurycotis lixa are doing very nicely, and have grown quite a bit since I got them! (they are definitely slower growing than E.improcera though). They have all developed the jet black coloration that is characteristic of this species, they are quite beautiful now! 😍

Here are some pictures of them:






I am excited to see just how big they'll get, they are supposed to be quite a bit larger than E.improcera, which is one of the smallest Eurycotis species in the hobby.

Well, that's going to do it for this post, I hope everyone enjoyed, will see you all soon! 😉

Friday, August 11, 2017

Click Beetle & Pasimachus Updates!!

Finally, after years of waiting, my Alaus melanops grub has matured!! 😁 I could have gotten it to pupate months after I originally caught it in 2014, but I never provided it with a little log to dig into before, apparently larvae of this species will refuse to pupate without a block of wood to bore into and construct their pupal cell in, they'll even put the process off an extra two years if they need to!

Well, I must say, for a larva that put off it's pupation so long, it turned into a nice sized adult male!! (at least I really think it's a male). It emerged from it's log after a lengthy three month or so inactivity period, honestly I was beginning to wonder if it had died or not! I have it housed with my Pyrophorus adults, (more on them shortly), since they have pretty much the same care requirements and can't hybridize.

Here are some pictures of the Alaus adult:






And here are a couple shots of the Alaus adult with my small Pyrophorus male, for comparison:



I'm so happy I was finally able to rear this specimen to maturity, too bad I don't have any females for him...

In other click beetle related news, another one of my original three Pyrophorus noctilucus has matured and dug it's way up to the surface, so now I have two active adults! This second one is quite a bit bigger than my original adult, and may be a female! I know my older, smaller adult is a male, since once it came into contact with the new adult, he chased it around and tried to mate with it, even exposing and extending his genitalia.

The new individual just ran away from those mating attempts, and never attempted to mount and mate with the smaller male, which makes me think it's a female! Time will tell I suppose! 😊

Here is a picture of them both snacking on an apple slice:


My last remaining individual from the original trio has also eclosed now, and will hopefully claw it's way up to the surface in a week or two! With any luck, I may have offspring from this species soon!

The other day, I decided to move my Pasimachus sp. "Arizona" to a smaller container, the reason being that they were having a hard time finding food in the larger container I had them in. They are quite old now, both individuals have lost most of their tibia, and while the female is still largely intact, the male is on his last legs, literally, a few of his legs are just little nubs now.

Anyway, I moved the adults to a smaller enclosure, and dumped most of the remaining substrate from their old enclosure into a ziplock bag for a few days, since I was planning on using it for a future Tenebrionid rehousing, (hey, waste not want not! The substrate was pretty clean and suitable for future use). Well yesterday I went to rehouse those Tenebs, (specifically Embaphion cf. contusum), and as I was adding the old Pasimachus substrate to their new enclosure, a long, dark shape came crawling out... A first instar Pasimachus larva!!! 😮

The LAST thing I was expecting from my old, run-down Pasimachus adults was offspring, especially since my female already laid an egg a few months ago that never hatched. I'm thrilled to have gotten a larva from this species, I'm really hoping I can rear it to adulthood, but with my previous track record breeding Carabids, I'm a bit doubtful.

I have moved it to a little deli cup with some of the substrate from the old Pasimachus cage, (a coconut fiber and sand mixture), which I am keeping fairly moist. I will be trying to feed it pre-killed mealworms and small roach nymphs, and maybe some live Trichorhina tomentosa.

Here are some pictures of the little bugger:






Very cool looking Carabid larvae, will be keeping you guys updated on it's progress! Considering how hard Carabid larvae are to rear, I'm not getting my hopes up too high that I will be able to rear it to adulthood, however, I do know of someone who has successfully done so before, so who knows? 🙂

Well, that is going to do it for today, I hope everyone enjoyed, will see you all next time! 😉

Sunday, April 16, 2017

Some Miscellaneous Updates

I am very happy to report that one of my Compsodes schwarzi nymphs has matured into a beautiful male, seems like this species is doing very well in my care, and I am well on my way to breeding them! 🙂

Here are some pictures of him:









I love the wing venation of this species, reminds me of insects you'd see in amber from prehistoric times! Can't wait until the females start maturing, hopefully I'll soon have large colony of this tiny species! 😊

While we are on the topic of roaches, I would also like to announce that I have found tiny nymphs in my Polyphaga aegyptiaca enclosure! I actually found them a couple weeks ago, but was waiting to announce it here on the blog until I had pictures. Unfortunately I still don't have any pictures of them, but decided I wanted to announce it anyway. 😛

My Alaus melanops grub still has not pupated, I am going to be searching for an appropriately sized log for it to bore into and pupate in, as I really just want to see it mature!

Anyway, I took a few pictures of it the other day, so here they are:




Such a beautiful grub, so cool looking! Hopefully I can find a good sized piece of wood for it soon...

And lastly, I took some pictures of my Oniscus asellus "Orange-ish" last month in sunlight, which really shows what they look like in real life, and never ended up posting them on the blog, so today I thought I would. 






So far they are doing well and breeding prolifically, however there have been no offspring with more intense coloration yet...

Anyway, that's gonna be it for today, hope you guys enjoy, will see you all soon! 🙂

Thursday, December 3, 2015

My Wood Is Rotten! Plus Some Click Beetle Stuff...

My Traeger wood pellets are finally done fermenting! It smells earthy, and is a dark brown color, so it is now ready to be used for my bugs! Truth be told, I don't have many species that need it, so it is not extremely useful right now. But I do have some click beetle larva that will probably benefit from a substrate of rotten wood and leaves, so I will be rehousing my click beetle larva and using the rotten wood as the substrate.
I have a single click beetle larva of an unknown species that I found in a log in the summer of 2014 that I have been trying to pupate, but apparently it is not ready yet, so I have rehoused it and I have used my rotten Traeger wood pellets and some dead leaves as the substrate. Here are some pictures of the larva!

Unknown click beetle larva



Tail close-up
Head close-ups

Hopefully this guy does well, I would really like to see what it turns into! :)
In regards to my Aeolus sp, one of my two adults died, and the three larva are doing well and are eating cat food.
As for my Alaus melanops larva, I thought it was going to pupate, but alas, I was wrong. I put a bunch of mealworms in its enclosure for it to eat, so far it has not shown signs of eating. Will keep you guys posted on any interesting developments.
Well, that's it for today, I hope you guys enjoyed this post! :)

Thursday, August 13, 2015

Alaus melanops update

My larva is about to pupate! I put it in a jar with very compressed substrate, and it has made a pupal cell! Unfortunately the cell is not on the side of the jar, so I can't see anything. I hope I can rear it to adulthood! Here are some pics of the larva before I moved it to the jar.





If possible I will try take pictures of the pupa, and hopefully the adult! Hope you guys enjoyed! :)