Showing posts with label Ceuthophilus chiricahuae. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ceuthophilus chiricahuae. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 8, 2023

January/February 2023's Fails

It's that time again, time to take a look back and see what losses my collection has suffered in the past couple months. 

Well, unfortunately my single male Eurycotis opaca "Jaruco" died, right after maturing. This was seemingly due to a Serratia bacteria infection, seems this batch of E.opaca came in infected with the stuff, and sadly my male happened to die as a result... 😢

Funnily enough, my sole female E.opaca "Soroa" also died due the same reason. However, there was a stray ooth in their shipping cup I had missed, which hatched about a month ago, so I have a decent amount of nymphs to work with it that strain thankfully.

However, this leaves me with a single adult male "Soroa", and an adult female "Jaruco"... I don't advocate for locality crosses, and their offspring will almost certainly look worse than either pure locality IMO, BUT I've always wondered what an intergrade between the two would look like. So, I guess I'll make that happen. 🤷‍♂️ I won't sell the offspring obviously, this is just to quell my own curiosity. Both these adults would die unmated anyways if I left them alone, so might as well see what happens when they cross (which could prove useful for identifying potential locality "hybrids" of this species, if those were to ever start flooding the market).

For whatever reason, my Cariblatta lutea seem to be failing. I got a strong and fast initial round of hatches not too long after getting these from Kyle, but the nymph survival rate has been abysmal thus far, and I've no idea why. 🤔 I still have a breedable number of nymphs, but not sure the population will actually grow much this generation, very odd, considering I feel my husbandry is on point for them.

Another Pseudophyllodromid that's taken a big L in my collection, Margattea cf. bisignata "Macao". Unfortunately I underestimated just how well my Perisphaerus punctatus were doing, and they outcompeted the Margattea in their enclosure before I realized what was going on. I have a single adult male, and a subadult female left... Whether this will be enough to save my culture, I'm not sure, but I'm not holding my breath... Though thankfully, at least two of the people I sent this species to here in the US have thriving colonies still, so I'm not too concerned with their state in the hobby. 😊

Now this is quite a bummer for me, but my Tafalisca eleuthera adults all died, one after the other, all prematurely, and seem to have barely reproduced in my care at all. I'm not sure why, because my husbandry parameters are pretty much the same as Kyle's, so they should have been fine, and indeed I raised them from nymphs with no problems.

I have found a total of four hatchlings so far, but I'm pretty sure that's gonna be it... It seems like my females didn't find my enclosure at all suitable for oviposition, depite them having bark, substrate, and cotton balls to potentially oviposit into (all of which are documented egg laying sites for them). Pretty disappointing outcome, considering how enamored with this species I am. 😢

My Ceuthophilus chiricahuae are also doing very poorly, and I'm not entirely sure why. The adults acted extremely territorially towards each other, and the false didn't lay a ton of eggs. A lot of the eggs they did lay simply rotted, and while the half dozen or so offspring that are remain are stable and growing well, I have less than I started with now... 😐 I do still have an adult female, but I've no idea if she's actually gravid, let alone mated. 
Anyways, I moved them to an enclosure with better ventilation, in a slightly warmer location, and will probably give them an actual humidity gradient rather than keeping the entire enclosure humid, just to see if that all helps the next generation do better.
So not a total loss for this species mind you, but awfully close.

Well, I found out why the Asbolus verrucosus Joshua sent me weren't doing well well. They didn't have entomophagous fungus, rather they were infected with parasitic wasps. 🙃😂 Four of the six Joshua sent me unfortunately died and had wasp larvae emerge from them, which instantly burrowed into the substrate and formed silky cocoons.

I know I should probably rear some of these wasps up, take pictures, etc. for the sake of documentation... But f**k it, I don't wanna risk some of these SOBs escaping and parasitizing any of my other Cryptoglossini, or god forbid any of my other Tenebs (though parasitic wasps DO tend to be very host specific). These crappy phone pics of their cocoons before I destroyed them is the best I can do:






So yeah, apparently not allowed to keep BDFBs... 🙃😂 Though a friend of mine reached out and offered to send me more, an offer which I'll probably take them up on next month or so.

Well, that about sums up all my failures of 2023 I think. 😅 Not too bad so far I guess. Thanks for reading, see y'all next time!

Wednesday, October 19, 2022

Camel Cricket Adults & Beetle Updates!

Some of my Ceuthophilus chiricahuae have started to mature, and they look pretty neat. 😀 It seems this species gets just a tad bigger than C.agassizii, and is certainly a lot leggier. 

Here are some pictures of a mature pair:

Male








Female





Hopefully these breed well for me, happy to finally have a third species of camel cricket in my collection. 😁 As much as I love the genus Ceuthophilus, I would REALLY love it if I could get my hands on another US native genus, especially one of the sand treaders... But, I shall stay content with my Ceuthophilus for now. 😅

Next up, a small update, but the other week I reared up a female Eleodes hispilabris "South Texas Race" adult with a nice red stripe going down the middle of her elytra, and felt compelled to take some pictures. Pictures that I will now share here. 😂





Very nice form of this species, glad they've been breeding well for me. 😊

Also, just thought I'd mention that I've gotten larvae from my Eleodes extricata and Eleodes subnitens now! 😁

Lastly, my Trogoderma sp. "Boise, ID" have been breeding incredibly well, and I now have starter colonies available for sale. 😄 I can see the larvae potentially being used as feeders, and honestly these may make decent cleaners in dry roach bins, they pretty much only eat dead, dried invertebrates, they'll eat dog food too but at a MUCH slower rate.

Anyways, I got pictures of the adults before, but not the larvae, here's some grubs digging into some dead invertebrates:




Kinda cute, in a creepy way, right? 😄 Glad these are doing well for me, hopefully they'll be identified to species eventually. 🤞

Anyways, that's gonna do it for this update post, thanks for reading, hope everyone enjoyed, stay safe, and I'll see you all next time! 😉

Tuesday, September 20, 2022

Awesome New Orthopterans & Roaches!

Kyle's Crazy September Package Series Pt. 2/4
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Onto the non-beetle inverts I got from Kyle in this box, starting with some new camel crickets, Ceuthophilus chiricahuae! 😁 It's been a while since I got the chance to work with a new camel cricket species, this particular one hails from AZ and is apparently limited to the Chiricahua Mountains. 
They're a very leggy species, clearly mainly cave/rocky outcropping dwellers, not quite as robust and ground dwelling as C.agassizii for example. They've proven easy to breed for Kyle thus far thankfully, and should make for a nice new addition to the hobby!

I've got my group of nymphs housed in a moderately ventilated 1 gallon jar with lots of curved, vertically slanted bark, and and some toilet paper rolls as hides. I'm keeping them humid and at around 74F°. I'll be feeding them primarily dog food, along with the occasional fruits and veggies.

Here are a few pictures of the nymphs:





Looking forward to seeing adults of this species, and seeing just how large they are compared to my other two Ceuthophilus.

Next up, Kyle sent me two ooths and an adult female of Euthlastoblatta sp. "Everglades"! Now, these may just be a previously unrecorded population of E.diaphana, but we'll see how the nymphs look compared to that species, when I eventually get nymphs hatching out that is. 😄

I've got her housed in a well ventilated deli cup with a thin layer of coconut fiber as the substrate, kept humid. There's leaf litter, bits of eggcrate and bark for hides, and I'm feeding her dog food and fruits. Keeping the enclosure at around 75-80F°.

Here are some pictures of the adult female:





If these end up NOT being E.diaphana, that'd be exciting, not only would it be a new species for culture, but they could potentially prove to be a new species, period. 😁 Or at the very least, a Euthlastoblatta adventive to FL that's not yet been formally recorded there. Hopefully this female will produce lots of offspring for me, fingers crossed! 🤞

And last but not least, Kyle sent me a couple nymph pairs of Tafalisca eleuthera, AKA "Silent Bush Crickets" (or as Kyle likes to call them, "Florida False Wetas"). These things are SO cool, perhaps some of my favorite Orthopterans in US culture to date. It's a large, arboreal species that can climb smooth surfaces, they're easy to breed, females will oviposit in damp coco fiber substrate with no issues. All life stages feed well on a staple diet of dog/cat/fish food, which you can supplement with the occasional bit of fruit/veggie matter (they'll also take down weak/soft bodied invertebrates). They're communal, don't make noise, and are also relatively calm when handled. Overall, an amazing US native Orthopteran, one I'm really glad has made it into culture! 😁

I've got mine housed in a moderately ventilated container with an inch or so of coconut fiber substrate, which I'm keeping humid. They've got vertical bark hides slanted against each other, and I'm feeding them dog food, fruits, and the occasional prekilled invertebrate.

Here are some pics of a large female nymph, while she's eating an incapacitated, but alive adult male Balta:














Such a neat species in terms of morphology, I can't wait to see adults in person! 😁 Hopefully they'll grow well for me, they're certainly eating a lot!

Well, that does it for this post, thanks for reading, hope everyone enjoyed, stay safe, and I'll see you all next time! 😉