Showing posts with label Chorisoneura parishi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chorisoneura parishi. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 30, 2023

Random Updates & New Bugs

My Yuukianura aphoruroides are doing swimmingly, despite the culture being contaminated with predatory mites and Poduromorpha sp. "Tiny Blue". The predatory mites seem not to be interested in the Yuukianaria, at least not enough to make a dent in their population. And the Poduromorpha also seem not to bother the Yuukianura, instead eating the more rotten foods that the Yuukianura already tend to ignore. So, the culture is thriving, and I've already set up another cup as a backup colony. 😃

Here are a couple crappy pics of a group swarming some food, along with lots of the sp. "Tiny Blue":



Such cute and vibrantly colored springtails, I'd like to get the Thailand Reds as well one day soon.

The Liposcelis sp. "TDE" I've isolated are breeding well, seems a very easy species to culture.

Finally got some pictures of them... though you can barely see the dang things. These are the best quality photos I could get of them, they're so fast and so tiny:




Definitely some neat little inverts, with good cleaner crew potential for drier setups.

Now for some rapidfire bad news... Unfortunately I killed all my Goliathus goliatus, they all made pupal cells, and one even made it to adulthood, but I kept them just a tad too humid during this stage, and that resulted in all of them dying as prepupal larvae, pupae, and even killed my one teneral adult. 😭  Apparently they don't tolerate excess humidity well at all, but I found it difficult to get their substrate to a properly compactable level without keeping it as humid as I did, semi-humid is a very difficult humidity level for me to maintain personally here in the high desert environment I live in. So, that's quite a bummer. I did snap some pics of my teneral adult through the hole I poked it's pupal cell, before it passed away, which I'll share here: 




Now for news that's perhaps even more frustrating, I accidentally killed my Titanophilus sp. "Colombia" by smashing part of her under the one piece of bark in her enclosure. 😟 This is particularly upsetting, since besides myself, literally only one other person keeps this species, AND she was doing fantastic for me up until this point (granted, she definitely wasn't mated, so I still needed to get a male from my buddy who's still got a small culture going before I had any hope of breeding this species). I'm quite angry at myself about this blunder, and in the future, should I ever acquire this species again, I will never use bark as a hide for them.

Unfortunately I've lost my cultures of Plectoptera poeyi, Margattea cf. bisignata, and Chorisoneura parishi. Thankfully, Kyle at Roachcrossing has a healthy colony of the former two, and should be able to send some back to me later this Fall. However, I don't know of anyone who has a good culture of the Chorisoneura... so those may be lost from culture now. 😞 

I just did a trade with my friend Junkai Wang, and now finally have TRUE Hemiblabera tenebricosa "Monroe County, FL". 😃 In case any of you aren't up to speed, the old hobby "tenebricosa" stock isn't actually tenebricosa, but is more likely H.roseni. The difference between those and these true H.tenebricosa are pretty obvious, and are outlined in my post about the issue here.

Care for these is pretty simple, I've got mine in a moderately ventilated setup with a couple inches of coco coir substrate topped with leaf litter, which I'm keeping humid.

Here are some pictures of the nymphs:







They're pretty colorful for Hemiblabera nymphs, really looking forward to seeing some adults!

I also got some Chalcolepidius smaragdinus from Kai, which were actually the main point of the trade. However, while he did mention they were damaged from being housed communally (this genus is quite territorial and adults will bite each other's legs off if kept communally, or at least particularly crowded), I was not prepared for just how bad they messed each other up. Simply moving from one end of the enclosure to another is a struggle for the 6 adults he sent me (1 male, 5 females), and most of their legs have been reduced to little stumps.

I wasn't sure I'd be able to get any eggs out of them whatsoever in their current state, it's a challenge even with perfectly mobile adults, as they seem rather picky about their oviposition spots. However, I just found two eggs in one of their setups the other day. Two eggs out of 5 females is pretty abysmal, but it's much better than nothing, which is honestly what I expected. So if I can get a total of 8-10 eggs somehow, then I'd honestly be stoked, as that would give me a breedable group to work with, and then i can try and do better with the next generation of CB adults. 🤞 

Even as damaged as their limbs are, they're still quite photogenic, so here are some pictures of the adults:









Such a beautiful species, would be amazing to get some larvae from them, so I've got my fingers crossed! 🤞

Also, big thanks to Ty from Ty Dye Exotics, he just sent me some Bantua robusta and Arenivaga sp. "Mt Ord", both of which I needed to restart my cultures of. 

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

Wednesday, February 9, 2022

The Mega Little Brown Ectobiid Update Post

Oh boy, this post has been a long time coming... 😅 I've got quite a few Ectobiid updates to share, so let's hop to it.

First off, all my Chorisoneura texensis "AL" have matured (they did so in late December/early January), and I've got a pretty even sex ratio. They've been producing tons of ooths, and just the other day, I found my first hatchlings! 😁 Very fast development time for these, now hopefully I can rear these babies to maturity with little mortality!

Here are some pics of the adults and ooths:

Adult male




Adult female





Ootheca

Really glad I'm having good success so far, I attribute this to the high amount of ventilation they have. Last time I worked with Alan's Alabama strain of this species, I couldn't get the adults to live long enough to lay more than a couple ooths, and the resulting nymphs didn't last long either. So this newfound success is promising indeed. 😁

Next up, a small update on my Chorisoneura parishi. They're doing fantastic, the next wave of adults started emerging a month or so ago, and the amount of ooths and nymphs they've produced so far is incredible. Definitely some feeder potential with these!

Here are some pictures of a medium nymph, and then a bunch of young nymphs feeding with some adults:

Medium nymph




A swarm of nymphs/adults eating apple



I just rehoused them to a larger setup the other day, will probably have 100s of them soon... 😅

So far, it seems only around 9 Margattea sp. "Macao" are still alive, 2-3 have matured into males, there's another male subadult, a female subadult, and a few tiny nymphs that are growing much slower than the others. My hope for breeding this species rests heavily on that one female subadult, who will hopefully molt asap and mate, then make a bunch of oothecae. So fingers crossed that happens... 🤞😅

Some pictures of an adult male, and one of the medium nymphs:

Adult male






Medium nymph


Hopefully I can breed these successfully, would really like to get them established in the US hobby!

My Balta vilis have been doing quite well, most are subadults now and I'm starting to get adults as well! Shouldn't be too long until I have a nice baby boom, this species is doing much better for me than they have in the past.

Here are some pics of one of the subadults and an adult male:

Subadult nymph







Adult male











Fingers crossed I can get a good second generation going here soon! 😄

Now for a dump of misc updates with no pictures... 😅
  • First off, on 1/29, I found Dipteretrum hanstroemi babies! The females have been laying a toon of ooths, and now I'm getting hatchlings, so I'll likely have them available in the near future! 😉
  • I recently found ooths in my Euthlastoblatta diaphana enclosure, which is great! I only have 2-3 females, the other 12 ended up being males... 😂 So here's hoping there's a lot of eggs per ooth!
  • I'm down to one Plectoptera poeyi female, the other one died randomly last month. However, I've also just found hatchlings in their setup, so that's somewhat of a relief. Hopefully there will be plenty more nymphs where that came from...
  • My Parcoblatta americana "Table Rock - ID" have FINALLY started maturing! Should have lots of oothecae being laid here soon!
  • Speaking of wood roaches, my Asian wood roaches, Asiablatta kyotensis, have started laying lots of ooths! I seemingly poisoned my original group by giving them cardboard hides laced with fire retardant chemicals... But the booster group I got from my friend recently started maturing last month, and boy have they been prolific! Should have lots of them soon, fingers crossed!
  • Now, while these next two species aren't brown, they are still Ectobiids, so guess I'll include them in this post... My Aglaopteryx gemma have started hatching out! 😁 And the adults are still alive, and laying quite prolifically, should have a thriving culture of this species soon!
  • Lastly, I've also started finding hatchlings in my Pseudomops septentrionalis "San Antonio, TX" enclosure! 😁 Very happy to have these again, and I'm glad they're thriving in my care!
Well, that's gonna do it for this mega post, thanks for reading, hope everyone enjoyed, stay safe, and I'll see you all next time! 😉