Hisserdude
Dynastes
I have been keeping 2 species of rove beetles ( Creophilus maxillosus, unknown sp. ) for about 3/4 months now, on moist coconut fiber. I have fed both species mealworms, and the occasional dog food piece. No eggs were ever laid. This week, I changed the substrate in the C.maxillosus cage, due to a grain mite outbreak. The new coconut fiber was wet, due to me being too lazy to dry it out. It was wet enough to squeeze water out of it easily. Yesterday I checked their cage and found 3/4 eggs at the bottom of the cage. I moved the eggs to their own container. That same day, i changed the substrate in the unknown sp cage, due to mites in their container as well. The new coco fiber was wet as well. Today i checked their cage, and found 3 eggs. Now that i think about it, my Harpalus penlyvanicus layed eggs in wet toilet paper in a milk cap. Maybe predatory beetles like laying eggs in wet substrate, for some reason. Does anybody have some other ground beetles they can test this out on? I am gonna try it out on my Carabus nemoralis. Who knows, maybe this could be a really big advancement in predatory beetle keeping! Or maybe it could be a fluke. Whatever it is, it could not hurt to try, lol.
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