Daniel J. R.
L3
Today I went to look at my two Tityus larvae to see how they were doing, and while I was inspecting the first one I stumbled upon a pupal cell that unfortunately popped open and out came a small female pupa! It was really exciting since this is my first time rearing beetles. <3 She seemed really healthy and thankfully her cell popped in such a way where the bottom half that was still in the container had stayed perfectly intact, and it was just large enough to continue holding her for the rest of her cycle.
However, the other larva I had is still a grub and looked as if he had started packing some substrate but didn't really have anything going yet. By the time I checked him out he bit the brush I was using to carefully move dirt around (which he's been known to do a number of times) and started pushing around the dirt and destroyed whatever he may had started. I'm glad I pulled him out because I found a ton of little red mites crawling in his folds and mouth parts, so I used a very very soft brush to get as many off as I could and put him back in. He dug down to the very bottom and hasn't moved much since, so right now I'm freezing a batch of substrate so I could possibly replace his current batch. It's hard to tell if he's ready to pupate like his neighbor, and I'm not sure if I should put him in an artificial cell or just leave him alone. I don't want to stress him out much more.
However, the other larva I had is still a grub and looked as if he had started packing some substrate but didn't really have anything going yet. By the time I checked him out he bit the brush I was using to carefully move dirt around (which he's been known to do a number of times) and started pushing around the dirt and destroyed whatever he may had started. I'm glad I pulled him out because I found a ton of little red mites crawling in his folds and mouth parts, so I used a very very soft brush to get as many off as I could and put him back in. He dug down to the very bottom and hasn't moved much since, so right now I'm freezing a batch of substrate so I could possibly replace his current batch. It's hard to tell if he's ready to pupate like his neighbor, and I'm not sure if I should put him in an artificial cell or just leave him alone. I don't want to stress him out much more.