Hello beetle breeding experts, another quick question regarding substrate.
I have some friends that have done pretty well raising Megasoma punctulatus. They have gone through a few generations but they also tell me that they have about a 40% die off (60% successful) from the egg to adult. I don't know but I assume that's about normal?
Anyway, they have been using a combination of Oak Leaf Mold with dead Mesquite branches but the Mesquite wood they are able to find is not completely decomposed. It is not the type that crumbles in your bare hands. They take a sledge hammer and smash it up. The mix is about 2/3 oak lead mold and 1/3 smashed up Mesquite branches. I have been reading on this forum that you should only use decomposed wood that crumbles in your bare hands or you must ferment the wood after grinding it up.
Do you think it works for them because the Oak Leaf Mold contains the needed microbes that the non decomposed wood is not providing? They have told me that in the past they used Oak Leaf Mold only but the larvae would die at L3 or so. Thus the non decomposed wood seems to be doing something despite not being decomposed.
Any comments would be appreciated. Shade of Eclipse, you have a lot of knowledge about the microbes and all that stuff so any comment from you would be really appreciated.
I'm new to all this stuff and still don't really understand the decomposed part completely. I also notice that in areas like the desert, there is not much decomposed wood around. So how do the species like Megasoma sleeperi survive if there is very little decomposed wood? There is alot of dead wood from branches, etc but most of it is very dry so it's not the kind that crumbles in your hands.
Thank you again,
Garin
I have some friends that have done pretty well raising Megasoma punctulatus. They have gone through a few generations but they also tell me that they have about a 40% die off (60% successful) from the egg to adult. I don't know but I assume that's about normal?
Anyway, they have been using a combination of Oak Leaf Mold with dead Mesquite branches but the Mesquite wood they are able to find is not completely decomposed. It is not the type that crumbles in your bare hands. They take a sledge hammer and smash it up. The mix is about 2/3 oak lead mold and 1/3 smashed up Mesquite branches. I have been reading on this forum that you should only use decomposed wood that crumbles in your bare hands or you must ferment the wood after grinding it up.
Do you think it works for them because the Oak Leaf Mold contains the needed microbes that the non decomposed wood is not providing? They have told me that in the past they used Oak Leaf Mold only but the larvae would die at L3 or so. Thus the non decomposed wood seems to be doing something despite not being decomposed.
Any comments would be appreciated. Shade of Eclipse, you have a lot of knowledge about the microbes and all that stuff so any comment from you would be really appreciated.
I'm new to all this stuff and still don't really understand the decomposed part completely. I also notice that in areas like the desert, there is not much decomposed wood around. So how do the species like Megasoma sleeperi survive if there is very little decomposed wood? There is alot of dead wood from branches, etc but most of it is very dry so it's not the kind that crumbles in your hands.
Thank you again,
Garin