Roachman26
Seventh Instar
I'm starting to really understand WHY the expensive, rare roaches are expensive and rare. My lateralis, cinerea, discoidalis, dubia, fusca, posticus and tesselata are all exploding beyond my comprehension. I started these colonies in January and there are more than I know what to do with. My decipiens, giganteus and subcincta are doing nothing, but slowly dying off.
I waited months for my giganteus to mature. They finally did and everything seemed great. Until I started randomly finding dead adults for no apparent reason. I did find a few tiny nymphs, but those have disappeared now too. I started with 15 smallish nymphs and now I have 8 adults left. All my other Blaberus are in the exact same set ups, in the same room with the same routine and they are all doing great.
I had a few E. decipiens die off, after maturing, for no apparent reason, but I was seeing ootheca hidden here and there. The ooths weren't hatching though. Just two weeks ago, I did see a few hatchling nymphs, but they have now disappeared. My adults seem fine, but are slowly dying off. I started these with subadults in January and they were all adults by Feb.
The L. subcincta stay buried ALL the time. When I fish around for them, they seem fine and are all adults now, but no babies. They were large nymphs in January too.
The room is 80ish at night and 85ish during the heat of the afternoon. Ambient humidity hovers between 50 and 60% all the time, but its obviously higher in their closed bins. They are all in 18 gallon bins with two 3x6" screened holes for ventilation. They've all got dead, dry hardwood leaves and 3 species of oak leaves to chew on. I keep a front corner of the substrate damp, and let it be dry-ish toward the back. They have dog kibble always available and fresh fruit every few days. Water crystals in a little cap at all times.
Can anyone see a pattern as far as which species are thriving and which ones aren't? Are their any other parameters to consider for why some species just aren't making it?
I also have craniifer, boliviensis, colloseus, E. distanti, H. flexivitta, and of course my old portentosa that are all doing fine and producing offspring. Not exploding like the above mentioned species, but doing well. I just found some B. orientalis and I've already gotten half a dozen ooths. Should have babies soon.
Any advice or direction would be greatly appreciated.
I waited months for my giganteus to mature. They finally did and everything seemed great. Until I started randomly finding dead adults for no apparent reason. I did find a few tiny nymphs, but those have disappeared now too. I started with 15 smallish nymphs and now I have 8 adults left. All my other Blaberus are in the exact same set ups, in the same room with the same routine and they are all doing great.
I had a few E. decipiens die off, after maturing, for no apparent reason, but I was seeing ootheca hidden here and there. The ooths weren't hatching though. Just two weeks ago, I did see a few hatchling nymphs, but they have now disappeared. My adults seem fine, but are slowly dying off. I started these with subadults in January and they were all adults by Feb.
The L. subcincta stay buried ALL the time. When I fish around for them, they seem fine and are all adults now, but no babies. They were large nymphs in January too.
The room is 80ish at night and 85ish during the heat of the afternoon. Ambient humidity hovers between 50 and 60% all the time, but its obviously higher in their closed bins. They are all in 18 gallon bins with two 3x6" screened holes for ventilation. They've all got dead, dry hardwood leaves and 3 species of oak leaves to chew on. I keep a front corner of the substrate damp, and let it be dry-ish toward the back. They have dog kibble always available and fresh fruit every few days. Water crystals in a little cap at all times.
Can anyone see a pattern as far as which species are thriving and which ones aren't? Are their any other parameters to consider for why some species just aren't making it?
I also have craniifer, boliviensis, colloseus, E. distanti, H. flexivitta, and of course my old portentosa that are all doing fine and producing offspring. Not exploding like the above mentioned species, but doing well. I just found some B. orientalis and I've already gotten half a dozen ooths. Should have babies soon.
Any advice or direction would be greatly appreciated.