koreascarabs
L2
hey guys!!! bow that is is the start of the beetle breeding season here in Korea i just got my hands on a pair of dicranocephalus adamsi and i was wondering if anybody here knew about how to breed these beetles...
I see that you translated my quote. However, there are a lot of wrong translations in here.Translate:
Goodbye old forum a though is some is but my experience will give one answer with character. When I is to Korea, collects the deer june beetle female and there is an enemy who the cranium receives the egg. (Does not collect the male not to do, does not lay the probably like that egg especially.) At that time sawdust was the sawdust which from Korea sells with Changsu june beetle. Disperses like that and while knowing, one hatches and probably is the oil well column, different one melts, through more army. That the larva which hatches commonly, 3 zero time when raises gave the leaf of the elm and the route [ley] which does not die to give tried. The larva eats quite well. Raised like that and later the larva grew at 3 zero final period. About at that time corporate culture larva when, by the way to hibernate in the writing, became and to be a writing become realness, anxiously in the refrigerator put in. Next day parents wishes a refrigerator temperature will be able to discover the larva which changes with the ice cream the facial weight at sub-zero. Anger gets peeled off though and does not go but gives the elm leaf company ear and to be doing well appears a growth. Of course system is an experience which is personal and sees and accurately is a secret of this corporate culture breeding, does not assure.
D. adamsi is not known to roll up the leaves and drag it under the ground to lay eggs.Mixed rotten hardwood leaves of most any type.
I agree. It's probably because they live in different environment.It's hard to imagine behavior is totally different in similar species in the same genus.
D. adamsi are found in China, South Korea, and Japan. I used to collect this species near my house when I was in South Korea. They prefer some kind of elm tree that are common in South korea but they can be collected in large number with banana traps. Many people claim that they are impossible to raise in captivity because mature L3 larvae die off. I tried to raise this species but when I got to L3 I accidentally killed the larva.What's the difference in the environment? What do you know about D. adamsi? I haven't seen any real details on that species.
I´m sorry for the bad translation...
But why do you write this in Chosŏn’gŭl / Hangeul ?
Greetings,
Mashku.
It is interesting and informative than none, but it can lead to misunderstanding.An imperfect translation is certainly a thousand times more interesting and informative than none, besides most of us only see the original characters as squares. I see the author mentions elm leaves for this beetle twice.