Sure, as mentioned the various Gromphadorhina species and so-called "Princisia" cross readily in captivity because they have the same male genitalia. The species designations are based on pronotum structure, granulation and setae which vary by population. The question is are any of the species really valid or are they mostly valid but readily hybridize (the genus "Princisia" cannot be valid when even the species are difficult to prove). G. oblongonota and "Princisia" have readily crossed in captivity (like G. portentosa and "Princisia") and it's very likely G. oblongonota and G. portentosa cross just as easily. Hopefully hobbyists will be careful about not crossing these, or at least labeling crosses, or we'll just end up with one big messy population that loses the uniqueness of its geographic varieties.do tell any specifics, or examples. ???
Once there has been hybridization in the colony, that’s it. You can’t just pick out the hybrids. Once the bloodline has been tainted EVERY SINGLE offspring is a hybrid whether they resemble one or look pure. Even if you take a hybrid and breed it out to a pure individual and keep breeding the offspring back to a pure strain… it’s still a hybrid. At that point there is only one way to get a pure culture, feed every individual off to your Theraphosa blondi and start up a brand spanking new culture.thanks for the feed back on the hisser hybrids, as i might have had some originally, as some looked odd from types, but now this last generation killed off the last of the odd ones, and only a few look differant from the crowd. i was wondering manly about the blaberus species, but cant find any of the odd ones now, so must have fed all the what now know were B. cranifer black wing, and some other kind off by mistake, or the dubias ate them. lol