Wednesday, March 25, 2026

cf. Rochaina metae Successful Hatching!

I have yet another successful Rochaina hatching under my belt, this time a wild collected ooth from Refugio Amazonas, Tambopata, Peru. 😁 Presumably Rochaina metae, as the person who found and collected this ootheca also found an adult female R.metae from the same locality, who went on to lay oothecae in captivity (one of which I was recently sent and am still incubating).
However, there is still technically a small chance this wild collected ooth, found on a twig of low growing foliage, could have been laid by something else entirely. Either a different Rochaina species like R.peruana, or even something closely related like Eushelfordia pica (also recorded from the same area in Peru) or another similar Nyctiboridae. I'll have a better idea once that captive laid ooth from the for sure R.metae female hatches, if the offspring look identical to these then it's safe to say they're both R.metae.

I kept this ooth in a 16 oz deli cup with a mesh lid, with a thin layer of coco fiber at the bottom, topped in some cork bark pieces. I placed the ooth on top of the bark and kept the substrate moist, but seldom misted the ooth and made sure the bark it was placed on stayed fairly dry. Very high air humidity but low surface moisture seems to be the key to incubating these types of arboreal Nyctiborids. This cup was housed within a larger 5 gallon enclosure for a different roach species, so the humidity stayed extra high. I kept them at around 80-85F°. The ooth took about 2.5 months to hatch after collection. Hard to say when exactly this one was laid obviously, but safe to assume 3-4 months is the average incubation period for Rochaina and possibly similar small, arboreal Nyctiboridae.

When the ooth hatched, it stayed very rigid, and the seam only opened up a tiny bit. The nymphs seemed to have some difficulties escaping the ooth, and after days of nymphs slowly trickling out, in the end I broke a small piece off from the rim to allow them to exit easier. The oothecae of these Nyctiborids are super tough, kinda feels like metal, and it was hard to break a piece off without just smashing the ooth.
Interestingly, as I would tease open the ooth over several days, while it was hard to get a good view of the contents, I would see some freshly teneral nymphs each day, which indicates that they hatched at staggered rates inside their ooth. It's very odd that these hatch inside the oothecae and then exit later, rather than the hatching being their exit from the ooth like in most roaches, quite unusual!

The resulting 25-30 nymphs are doing well in a half gallon screw top jar with a fully vented lid. There is a thin layer of coco fiber substrate, topped with artificial fern fronds as their hides. I'm keeping the substrate moist, but only lightly misting the fake foliage once or twice a week, again high air humidity and low surface moisture is definitely the way to go for these I've noticed, after figuring that out with R.bilunata. I'm feeding them artificial pollen, fish/dog food, and fresh fruits. Several of them have already molted to L2, interestingly in this species the patterning on L1 and L2 are identical, compared to the extreme patterning differences between L1 and L2 R.bilunata.

Ootheca (shortly after arrival)

Ootheca hatching (note the seam is slightly open)

L1 nymphs











L2 nymph









Such adorable and rotund little nymphs, thankfully they seem to be doing quite well for me! And thanks to having already figured out the humidity/moisture preferences of R.bilunata and extrapolating that methodology to these Peruvian cf. Rochaina metae, I was able to avoid any L1 mortality, seems they're all gonna make it to L2 with no issues. 😄
Will for sure keep you all posted on their progress, and the progress of the captive produced R.metae ooth, as once that ooth hatches I will have a much better idea as to the identity of these nymphs from the wild collected ooth.

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

Wednesday, March 18, 2026

New 'pods, & Cool Roaches!

I gotta say, as far as underrated isopods in the hobby go, I think Cubaris sp. "Platin Tung Song" is definitely one of the neater ones. They're not a very large species but have very nice patterning and an almost opalescent sheen to them, as well as a relatively flat body morphology that makes them look unique. 

I have mine in a large, moderately ventilated bin with a few inches of coco fiber substrate topped in coco coir chunks, leaf litter and bark hides (my Archimandrita cf. tesselata "Cerro Chucanti, Panama" enclosure). I'm keeping them humid, at around 75-80F°, and am feeding them dog food as a supplemental diet (I guess apple slices too since that's what I give the Archimandrita, though isopods don't tend to eat much fruit).




They've been breeding fairly consistently in the setup, and I'll probably leave them in there until the Archimandrita start breeding, at which point I'll probably set up a proper culture for the Cubaris specifically (as they'll certainly get overrun by the Archimandrita).

Last year, my buddy Brandon Maines gave me the last of his Lucihormetica verrucosa "Old Hobby Stock", as he was cutting down his invert collection and didn't want these anymore. This is the standard stock cultured here in the US, of unknown origin (and possibly a locality cross). They look pretty different from the "Venezeula" stock I have, a bit more colorful with less black patterning on average.

I have them set up in a moderately ventilated container with several inches of coco fiber substrate, which I'm keeping humid. They're kept at around 75F°, and I'm feeding them dog food and apple slices. 








They have already bred for me, and I expect I'll have a robust culture of them fairly soon.

Last year, along with the Papuaphiloscia laevis I got from Satchell Watts-Kerr, there were some stowaway Venezillo parvus in with them, presumably also from New Orleans, LA. I didn't yet have a wild type culture of this species established, so I figured I'd isolate some out and get on that. Fast forward several months, and I now have a robust culture of these. 😄

They're in a minimally ventilated container with a couple inches of old roach substrate (mostly coco coir and roach frass), topped with leaf litter. I'm keeping them moist, at around 75-80F°, and am feeding them dog food as a supplemental diet.







Nice to finally have a wild type colony of this diminutive species going, with locality data no less!

Last Roachcrossing Bugapalooza, I won a pair of Kyle's Blaberus atropos "Shinigami" project. These were isolated from the "Wynwood, FL" stock, and chose for the high black markings on the pronotum. So these no longer throw out the standard square markings on the pronotal disc, but rather the more "hammerhead" type markings. Supposedly if raised at a higher humidity, even more of their pronotums will come out black, and Kyle is continuing to refine and cull his stock to try and get the entire pronotums to be black... I'm not sure if that's possible, and if it is it will probably take many more years of line breeding, but I suppose I'll try and refine my culture as well while I keep them.

I've got my pair in a well ventilated enclosure with a thin layer of coco fiber, topped with bark and eggcrate hides. I keep them at around 80-85F°, and feed them dog food and apple slices.
I was keeping them on a 50/50 humidity gradient, which is probably why their pronotums came out with only the "hammerhead" type markings, instead of the higher black that this line supposedly already exhibits when kept more humid, so now I'm keeping the entire enclosure humid. 






This female was quite gravid when I took these pics, and sure enough she gave birth not too long after. Hopefully the next generation I rear up will have even darker pronotums now that I'm raising them in more humid conditions to begin with. 👍 

Last but not least, I'm happy to say all my Rochaina bilunata have made it to L5! I lost one in the process due to a mismolting fluke, so now I have 12 nymphs in total, but they all seem healthy and it shouldn't be long till they molt to L6!






They are so unbelievably adorable, and I am so excited to be documenting each instar of this iconic species! ☺️

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