That would be an interesting experiment. Hopefully you can share your experience so that the hobby can rely more on captive bred specimens of L elaphus because right now almost all of them in the hobby are wild caught. We surely don't want to contribute to the decline of the species to levels like L cervusI'm not actually working with elaphus at the moment, but the next time I do, maybe I'll skip using logs in a couple of breeding set-ups to see if I get similar results as with logs. My results in getting elaphus to lay eggs have been very mixed. When I did get larvae, I got tons of them. In other attempts, no eggs were laid at all.
The decline of L. cervus is due to habitat loss, not collecting. Compared to centuries ago, there's very little broadleaf deciduous forest still left in Europe and the UK.That would be an interesting experiment. Hopefully you can share your experience so that the hobby can rely more on captive bred specimens of L elaphus because right now almost all of them in the hobby are wild caught. We surely don't want to contribute to the decline of the species to levels like L cervus
Yes, that is correct. I am mostly just saying that we should not contribute even a little to the potential decline of a species if we do not need to. The hobby already has a bad reputation in many countries, due to illegal collection and illegal release... we need not to do this.The decline of L. cervus is due to habitat loss, not collecting. Compared to centuries ago, there's very little broadleaf deciduous forest still left in Europe and the UK.
But yes - captive breeding is preferable, for various reasons.