Thanks for tagging me 
@All About Arthropods. You and others here have helped bring several cool lines of 
Tenebrionidae into my life. 
This family of beetles has really captured my affections, and I have numerous projects going in my bug room. I was hooked by native desert species, because of their ease and antics. It's mostly the usual suspects (various 
Eleodes, 
Cryptglossa, 
Asbolus).
In the past couple years I've also become interested in some of the locals in my area of western NY state. 
Bolitotherus have been very fun, and my colony is 18+ months old. I also have a group of 
Alobates producing larvae (some pics in another thread).  This past summer I was amazed to collect a group of beetles that look to me like 
Tenebrio molitor, though I'd never encountered them out in the wild before. I have them reproducing in a deli cup just to see how a colony of wild collected might behave. 
I also have a crush on the related ironclad beetles (Zopheridae), so I have enclosures of 
Phloeodes from out west, and some locally collected 
Phellopsis obcordata living on bracket fungi since May 2019. Neither have reproduced as far as I can tell, though I'm hopeful about the 
Phellopsis. My grand 
Zopherus nodulosus haldemani experiment seems to be a bust after several months, Unless there are secret eggs/larvae hiding out in their enclosure, which I haven't touched since the beetles expired.
@I Fox, like others I think it's great that you've worked with a wider range of genera. The first darkling I ever saw was on a hike in San Diego (maybe 
Stenomorpha?) which is my beetleforum profile image. I've long wanted to learn more about the rounder, rougher chunkies.
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