Should I be concerned about my Dynastes tityus being L1 for so long? the one may have molted to L2 or is just a big L1 waiting to molt...but i am not sure since I try to leave them alone as much as possible...only checking every..3 weeks ish?
Yea me too....wow I'm bad with math and calculating how much time has gone by...either way they are significantly larger when they hatched...feed alot...and have the bluish black gut....guess I should just be patient huh?er...i heard L1 stage is around 4-7 weeks.
Yea me too....wow I'm bad with math and calculating how much time has gone by...either way they are significantly larger when they hatched...feed alot...and have the bluish black gut....guess I should just be patient huh?
August 27th-ish for the first one.warm temperate = faster growth!![]()
Also, next time write the date when they were hatched.
Did you watch the video? Are they L1?The substrate is bad, substrate quality trumps temperature by a mile. Three months in L1 is not good.
Yea I read about your fast growing granti....that growth seems ridiculously fast! Wish my tityus would grow like that haha.Not sure how much they differ but I got my granti two weeks after you posted that yours hatched they were smaller then the one in your video and are all very large L3 now... What does your sub consist of ?
And my opinion would be L1.
10 inches? For L1???Your substrate is far too shallow. Take out all the cocoa fibre, they cannot eat that. Give them a mix of finely chopped / crushed soft white rotted oak and well rotted leaf litter. Fill the tank 10 inches deep at least - give them some depth. As Orin says, your current substrate is bad, there is no food there so this is why they are not growing.
Ok...call me dumb....but what exactly does this rotting wood look like? I have mainly beech in my collecting area. I have a kritter keeper full of this crushed up oak....uploading a quick vid as I type this.Your substrate is far too shallow. Take out all the cocoa fibre, they cannot eat that. Give them a mix of finely chopped / crushed soft white rotted oak and well rotted leaf litter. Fill the tank 10 inches deep at least - give them some depth. As Orin says, your current substrate is bad, there is no food there so this is why they are not growing.
This is a bit of white rot oak of the type I mean:Ok...call me dumb....but what exactly does this rotting wood look like?
That rotting wood stayed in my car for many months, including in summer, where it was exposed almost nonstop to extreme heat. When I finally used it, the wood was completely dry and had absolutely no parasites.I looked at your video but it just looked like shadows. Did you heat the substrate to kill pests? I've used beech with good results but I suggest you simply change out the substrate and monitor for frass production (place each in a 16oz or smaller deli full of new substrate for observation). If there isn't a pile of frass as big as the grub after a few weeks new substrate may need to be tried. Stunted larvae can survive and grow to healthy adults if switched to good food as long as they're not flaccid.