Hi all,
I'm looking to start breeding beetles as a hobby and I want to get some advise from anyone who has experience with this.
I'm interested in breeding either Rainbow Stag Beetles (Phalacrognathus Muelleri) or Rhino Beetles (Xylotrupes Ulysses) but I'm having a hard time getting a comprehensive guide on how to breed them efficiently.
The most practical breeding set-up I've found online came from "Miss Phantom Fangs", click here to view it.
It basically consists of materials that can be purchased from my local gardening supplies store:
From the videos that I've seen, larvae in captivity are normally fed rotting wood, especially hard wood that has been affected by "white-rot" which makes the wood very crumbly. I just want to confirm whether the sugar cane mulch will be enough to sustain the larvae. If I can just feed them the sugar cane mulch, it would be a lot more practical as gathering the right type of rotting wood sounds like a very laborious task from my research.
My proposed set up would involve getting a 50 litre clear plastic enclosure, filling it with the above substrate and introducing 1 male beetle and 2-3 female beetles. I would also put sterile flat tree bark pieces over the substrate to help any beetle that flips on it's back. I would continuously mist spray the enclosure to maintain a humidity of around 75%-85% (mist spraying once a day).
I would leave the adult beetles there for 8 weeks, feeding them beetle jelly. After 8 weeks I would carefully rummage around the substrate, looking for larvae. If the larvae is present, I would just leave all the larvae there and let them grow on their own. I would still keep the adults there as I assume they'd just keep mating and laying eggs until the end of their adult life cycle. I would change the substrate once every 6 months to add more food for the larvae (sugar cane mulch and dry dog food pellets). From what I've read, it takes the larvae around 12 months to pupate, can anyone confirm this?
The above set-up would theoretically work for Rhino Beetles but would it work for the Rainbow Stag Beetles? From my research, the Rainbow Stag Beetle seems to lay eggs inside rotting wood stumps, not sure if they will freely lay eggs in substrate?
I'm also not sure how often I should check for eggs/larvae/pupae or whether the adults would have emerged so I'd love to hear any suggestions from people with more experience in the matter as to how to best manage the maintenance keeping in mind the beetle's life cycles.
Any insight on this topic would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks!
Dennis
I'm looking to start breeding beetles as a hobby and I want to get some advise from anyone who has experience with this.
I'm interested in breeding either Rainbow Stag Beetles (Phalacrognathus Muelleri) or Rhino Beetles (Xylotrupes Ulysses) but I'm having a hard time getting a comprehensive guide on how to breed them efficiently.
The most practical breeding set-up I've found online came from "Miss Phantom Fangs", click here to view it.
It basically consists of materials that can be purchased from my local gardening supplies store:
- A 50 litre plastic container with ventilation holes
- Organic Compost
- Garden Soil
- Sugar Cane Mulch
From the videos that I've seen, larvae in captivity are normally fed rotting wood, especially hard wood that has been affected by "white-rot" which makes the wood very crumbly. I just want to confirm whether the sugar cane mulch will be enough to sustain the larvae. If I can just feed them the sugar cane mulch, it would be a lot more practical as gathering the right type of rotting wood sounds like a very laborious task from my research.
My proposed set up would involve getting a 50 litre clear plastic enclosure, filling it with the above substrate and introducing 1 male beetle and 2-3 female beetles. I would also put sterile flat tree bark pieces over the substrate to help any beetle that flips on it's back. I would continuously mist spray the enclosure to maintain a humidity of around 75%-85% (mist spraying once a day).
I would leave the adult beetles there for 8 weeks, feeding them beetle jelly. After 8 weeks I would carefully rummage around the substrate, looking for larvae. If the larvae is present, I would just leave all the larvae there and let them grow on their own. I would still keep the adults there as I assume they'd just keep mating and laying eggs until the end of their adult life cycle. I would change the substrate once every 6 months to add more food for the larvae (sugar cane mulch and dry dog food pellets). From what I've read, it takes the larvae around 12 months to pupate, can anyone confirm this?
The above set-up would theoretically work for Rhino Beetles but would it work for the Rainbow Stag Beetles? From my research, the Rainbow Stag Beetle seems to lay eggs inside rotting wood stumps, not sure if they will freely lay eggs in substrate?
I'm also not sure how often I should check for eggs/larvae/pupae or whether the adults would have emerged so I'd love to hear any suggestions from people with more experience in the matter as to how to best manage the maintenance keeping in mind the beetle's life cycles.
Any insight on this topic would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks!
Dennis