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Pardalis posted:I wish I could help! If you ever have baby giant millipedes, I would love to buy them. You should definitely find some species of phasmids and mantids if you can! They are super interesting, especially for kids. A favorite is Aussie prickly stick insects. My giant millies are only about 4.5 inches at the moment, but they're growing fast. I think all non-native phasmids are illegal in georgia, unfortunately. I'm going to go out this weekend bug hunting. Already found an eyed click beetle, so I'm off to a good start.
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# ? Apr 23, 2013 22:21 |
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# ? May 4, 2024 13:07 |
I'd totally love some giant millipedes, but the market seems to have dried up since you're not allowed to import them anymore (IIRC?). Are there wide-ranging bans on them? I figured they were legal here and didn't even bother to look into it when I was reading about them and checked out some of the common bug dealers for info.
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# ? Apr 23, 2013 22:43 |
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Delta-Wye posted:I'd totally love some giant millipedes, but the market seems to have dried up since you're not allowed to import them anymore (IIRC?). Are there wide-ranging bans on them? I figured they were legal here and didn't even bother to look into it when I was reading about them and checked out some of the common bug dealers for info. I had the opportunity to import some a while back, but the red tape involved made it not worth it. They wanted to quarantine them at a university or some poo poo for like 6 weeks before I could get them. About 10 or 15 years ago I bought some for like $10 each, now they're like $85-$125 each.
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# ? Apr 23, 2013 23:07 |
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I think the country of origin for African giant millipedes is the issue; seems like milli's from other countries can be brought in fine, but BC would know better. Non-native Phasmids are illegal throughout the US. Institutions can get permits to keep them, but not individuals. I've also heard antedotally that the further south you are, the harder it is to get the permits (basically more of a fear of colonization of any escapees.) Even native ones make people a little iffy, since while it is legal, you might have to prove they are native. Similarlly, a lot of people don't like talking about owning mantids too much on open sites because of the close relationship between phasmids and mantids. Mantids are legal to own on a federal level, but check state laws esp. regarding native species. General rule of thumb, always check state and local laws. One of the nearby counties in MD bans all exotic pets for example. I've had to yell at people on Fauna classifieds selling exotic phamids, and they won't believe me until I straight up linked the USDA rules from the .gov site. That was a few years ago though. Oh, sidenote. Guy in Ask/Tell on brewing mentioned using mealworms in a brew for the Nordic food lab. This planted a seed in my head, and I think I'm going to try to make a summer Saison with the Brood 2 cicadas when they emerge soon. Figure I'll use ginger, grapefruit peel and/or orange peel for some citrus flavor. Hopefully it'll be good. ZarathustraFollower fucked around with this message at 01:29 on Apr 24, 2013 |
# ? Apr 24, 2013 01:26 |
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ZarathustraFollower posted:I think the country of origin for African giant millipedes is the issue; seems like milli's from other countries can be brought in fine, but BC would know better. When I was looking to do the import from Kenya, there was no issue with any other inverts, just the millies. It's because of the fear of introducing exotic plant eating inverts. Phasmids are especially prohibited due to the fact that many are parthenogenic. Mantids are fine because the ecological impact of a small insect predator is much smaller than a phasmid, millie, or some other potentionally damaging invert.
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# ? Apr 24, 2013 02:23 |
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Hey guys I've been wondering lately, what ever happened to Crikey IRL?
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# ? Apr 25, 2013 14:15 |
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Hey, guys, I love this thread and all the great info and pics therein! I've had an Emperor scorpion since December of 2012, so for about five months now. I keep him(?) in a twenty gallon long tank with plenty of burrows/hiding places and keep the tank at about 75-80 degrees and anywhere from 75 to 85 percent humididty. He's got lots of natural, live moss to keep the humidity, plenty of substrate to burrow, and a small Exo-Terra waterfall feature for his water/climbing needs. He's been eating fairly regularly up until a couple weeks ago. Since then, he's been hiding in his burrow (an Exo-Terra magnetic rock den) and refusing food. I've been assuming he's been prepping up to molt, but when he emerged yesterday, he was missing a leg and had not molted. I looked all over for the missing appendage, but it was nowhere to be found. I realize that, without pictures, the advice you guys have may be limited, but is there anything you can tell me that might shed some light on this mystery? Is there anything I can do to improve his quality of life or make the habitat safer? Will he grow his leg back? To clarify, he doesn't seem to be wounded, just missing the leg.
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# ? May 1, 2013 22:36 |
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Speaking of missing legs, I'll quote myself here from the spider safe thread since this one is more active -Voltin Bolt posted:I finally got off my rear end and started work on my spider drawing tutorial (I've had the notes sitting around for two years at this point) but I'm a little stuck for references for a couple of the anatomy illustrations. The tutorial is meant for learning to draw all types of spiders and will feature illustrated examples of lots of sorts.
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# ? May 2, 2013 15:06 |
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CarpenterWalrus posted:Hey, guys, I love this thread and all the great info and pics therein! I've had an Emperor scorpion since December of 2012, so for about five months now. I keep him(?) in a twenty gallon long tank with plenty of burrows/hiding places and keep the tank at about 75-80 degrees and anywhere from 75 to 85 percent humididty. He's got lots of natural, live moss to keep the humidity, plenty of substrate to burrow, and a small Exo-Terra waterfall feature for his water/climbing needs. He's been eating fairly regularly up until a couple weeks ago. Since then, he's been hiding in his burrow (an Exo-Terra magnetic rock den) and refusing food. I've been assuming he's been prepping up to molt, but when he emerged yesterday, he was missing a leg and had not molted. I looked all over for the missing appendage, but it was nowhere to be found. I realize that, without pictures, the advice you guys have may be limited, but is there anything you can tell me that might shed some light on this mystery? Is there anything I can do to improve his quality of life or make the habitat safer? Will he grow his leg back? To clarify, he doesn't seem to be wounded, just missing the leg. Were there crickets in the cage at the time it lost a leg? Could be an injury from that. If not, it might have just gotten stuck and pulled the leg off itself to get free. Do you know how old it is? Scorpions molt a specific amount of times until they hit adulthood (so in some species, the 7th molt would be the final one for example) if it is young and going to molt more times, it could regrow the leg. If it is an adult, it won't, although lacking one leg isn't going to affect it at all. Voltin, I don't have any pics like that, but at worst you could ask on arachnoboards. By sheer volume, someone on there should have a taranula missing that leg. Have you tried to look at photos of a taranula molting? The lack of colouration in much of the exoskeleton might help highlight joints. If you ask around, someone could probably mail you an old molt too.
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# ? May 2, 2013 22:12 |
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I am not sure if you can find it online, but in Schultz' Tarantula Keeper's guide there is at least one picture of a spider missing part of a leg.
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# ? May 2, 2013 22:27 |
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There was one rather large cricket in there at the time. When I discovered the missing leg, I immediately removed the cricket. Again, I looked all over the hab for the leg, but found nothing. Is it possible the cricket ate the leg entirely? Seems unlikely, but I don't know. I don't have any idea how old the scorpion (Bartleby) is, and neither would the shop-keeps. He's about four inches from claw to curve of tail, so I don't think he's fully grown, yet. But, I've had him for a little over five months now and no molt. Should I be more worried?
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# ? May 2, 2013 22:59 |
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Molts won't work since the exuviae tears apart pretty much right at that point I've also got the guide right here, it's one of my reference books I've been using for the project illustrations, but it doesn't have any photos that show that particular angle unfortunately.
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# ? May 2, 2013 23:42 |
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Hey guys, a friend of mine has been catching some spiders in her house and needs help IDing them. I'm not really good at identifying inverts so I figured I'd ask here. Some things about them: -They ball up when threatened -They weave webs -She's found about 4 so far in the same area of her house (her bathroom) -She lives in the northeastern US. Here's some pictures of them, they're quite tiny! Defensive posture:
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# ? May 8, 2013 19:49 |
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I have this "rotting log" mini ecosystem I made. It has mostly pillbugs, sowbugs, springtails, mites, and all kinds of other critters living in it. Today I peeked in and saw a resident I hadn't seen before... A Psuedoscorpion!
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# ? May 13, 2013 01:51 |
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Pseudoscorpions are so cool. They're tiny dust mite eating friends! I've heard that you can leave a damp towel in a dry part of your basement to attract them.
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# ? May 13, 2013 01:59 |
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Improbable Lobster posted:Pseudoscorpions are so cool. They're tiny dust mite eating friends! I haven't seen one in years. It's been feeding off the springtails and baby isopods in my little experiment. Some of my fruitflies have escaped from my dart frog tanks and made their way into the container so I'm sure the little guy has gotten a few of those too.
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# ? May 13, 2013 02:04 |
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My Dubias finally got here! I've got them all set up with the standard egg crates and rubbermaid setup, along with trays of high-protein cat food and water gel. They can eat the food just fine without me grinding it into powder, right? I see it ground up in a lot of tutorials, but it seems kinda ridiculous to me that a scavenger like a roach can't chew its own drat food.
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# ? May 13, 2013 17:07 |
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Mr. Vile posted:My Dubias finally got here! I've got them all set up with the standard egg crates and rubbermaid setup, along with trays of high-protein cat food and water gel. They can eat the food just fine without me grinding it into powder, right? I see it ground up in a lot of tutorials, but it seems kinda ridiculous to me that a scavenger like a roach can't chew its own drat food. They can but they much much much prefer softer foods. If I give them something like hard cat or dog food I always put it in a little shallow dish/cup or something to soak it in. Sometimes I'll take a deli cup and cut it down to just make a very shallow dish. Do you have a heat light on them or under tank heater?
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# ? May 13, 2013 17:19 |
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Greycious posted:They can but they much much much prefer softer foods. If I give them something like hard cat or dog food I always put it in a little shallow dish/cup or something to soak it in. Sometimes I'll take a deli cup and cut it down to just make a very shallow dish. Hmm, maybe I'll soak it or grind it up, then. Yeah, I got a plastics-safe heat mat and thermostat and it's staying at a nice warm 90F or so.
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# ? May 13, 2013 17:27 |
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I use plastic mason jar lids as dishes Works really well. I mostly give mine a ground mixture of cat food, alfalfa,powdered milk, and vit powder. Basically cricket chow. Along with that I'll toss in some citrus fruit. Occasionally when the gecko gets a baby food treat, so do the roaches. They go to town on that dish. Mine don't have their own heating source anymore. They did until they got moved to sit right below a snake tank. So they use that for heat. I had their pad turned out after the move at first, but I started to have a few deaths. Nothing since then.
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# ? May 13, 2013 17:30 |
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Cless Alvein posted:I use plastic mason jar lids as dishes Works really well. I mostly give mine a ground mixture of cat food, alfalfa,powdered milk, and vit powder. Basically cricket chow. Along with that I'll toss in some citrus fruit. Occasionally when the gecko gets a baby food treat, so do the roaches. They go to town on that dish. Mine don't have their own heating source anymore. They did until they got moved to sit right below a snake tank. So they use that for heat. I had their pad turned out after the move at first, but I started to have a few deaths. Nothing since then. I just used some plastic tupperware type things and sandpapered the sides so they can climb on it. It seems to work fine, they can get in and out of them easily.
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# ? May 13, 2013 17:51 |
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I'm not sure if this is the right place to mention it but a pet shop near me is closing. All of their inverts are 50% off and if any goons are in or near the Mississauga area it might be worth checking out. Their site is Here. It's where I got my G. rosea.
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# ? May 17, 2013 22:12 |
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Improbable Lobster posted:I'm not sure if this is the right place to mention it but a pet shop near me is closing. All of their inverts are 50% off and if any goons are in or near the Mississauga area it might be worth checking out. Their site is Here. It's where I got my G. rosea. I can see why they are closing. Their sale prices are about what I would be willing to pay for most of that stuff from a normal pet store. Seriously, asking $60 for a vinegaroon is crazy.
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# ? May 17, 2013 22:48 |
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It's the same with the amphibians. I've sold animals for less than their sale prices, and their regular prices - really, $70 for an axolotl? I'd charge similar for two animals, with shipping included. It feels like they took the price the breeder charged them (without getting a quantity discount) and doubled it.
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# ? May 17, 2013 23:35 |
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So for $50 I just got the following off craigslist: Slings: B. Boehmei 2 P. irminia P. pulcher G. pulchripes G. pulchra an unknown adult chilean tarantula (Looks like a scrofa and about the right size, but waiting for a molt.) and a massive dubia colony, all in their tanks. All in all, a good find I would say.
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# ? Jun 9, 2013 01:03 |
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I am so incredibly jealous.
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# ? Jun 9, 2013 01:53 |
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That sounds very cheap, I am looking into getting a juvie G. pulchripes as my second T and they seem to cost around 40-60$ here. Setups and care sheets make it sound like G. pulchripes and G. rosea have about the same requirements, or is there much of a difference? Fake edit: my G. rosea seems to be doing well, other than putting substrate into her water dish every now and then.
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# ? Jun 9, 2013 14:36 |
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I just traded my MM C. cyaneopubescens for an A. geniculata, very happy.
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# ? Jun 12, 2013 10:17 |
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My girlfriend teaches first grade and I'm tarantula-sitting her class pet while she's travelling over the summer. Mylie is a G. Rosea and she's my first arthropod. Turns out she's been receiving proper care, according to the OP, but I bought the Schultz book anyway. I've only had her for a week and already I'm in love.
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# ? Jun 14, 2013 07:47 |
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One of usssssssssss
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# ? Jun 15, 2013 07:42 |
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Does anyone know of any spider rescues in the Washington, Idaho, or Montana area? I'm thinking of getting a spider and I don't really want to buy one from a pet store. I don't like to support pet stores...I've been looking on craigslist, but haven't really seen anything. I also don't want to pay to a whole new setup either.
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# ? Jun 15, 2013 18:54 |
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A Sleepy Budgie posted:Does anyone know of any spider rescues in the Washington, Idaho, or Montana area? I'm thinking of getting a spider and I don't really want to buy one from a pet store. I don't like to support pet stores...I've been looking on craigslist, but haven't really seen anything. I also don't want to pay to a whole new setup either. I've never heard of a spider rescue anywhere. If you've a good local pet store, talk to them. Back in Austin if a tarantula came in weird (injured, or in the worst case paralyzed from a pepsis wasp) they'd hold it for me to see if I could get it back up to health. A set up should be <$10 if you do it right. Get a display container from any store, heat up a nail and use that to melt air holes into the plastic (you can drill it as an alternative, but I feel that leaves too sharp of an edge) and a brick of coco-nut fiber should be $5 at a decent pet store. Water dish can be a cap from a soda bottle or milk carton. Hide can be just any old thing you have laying around, or just get a flat rock from outside and dig a divet under it. Bam, done. (Sterilize anything from outside first using some cleaning spray and rinsing it a lot). That's for a terrestrial tarantula. Arboreal might not even need substrate, and for either an arboreal or burrowing tarantula those tall cereal containers work decent. ZarathustraFollower fucked around with this message at 21:44 on Jun 15, 2013 |
# ? Jun 15, 2013 21:39 |
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ZarathustraFollower posted:I've never heard of a spider rescue anywhere.
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# ? Jun 15, 2013 21:45 |
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Guess who got a second tarantula today? (Don't guess, it was me) I got a Ephebopus murinus (Skeleton tarantula). I'm not sure of the sex (I suspect male, though it lacks the boxing glove pedipalps) but it is gorgeous and seems to be taking to its new home pretty well. I gave it a similar setup to my G. rosea and I'm letting it settle into its home before I start feeding it. Have I made a grave mistake? It didn't reared or other seemed agressive/'upset' when I moved it into the proper tank.
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# ? Jun 26, 2013 07:17 |
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Improbable Lobster posted:Guess who got a second tarantula today? (Don't guess, it was me) I've never had an E. murinus, but I've had a few E.cyanognathus before and I kept them quite a bit more humid than a rosie would like. Here's a caresheet http://www.arachnoboards.com/ab/showthread.php?157418-Blue-Fang-Care-Sheet edit: oh yeah.... you were talking about E. murinus http://atshq.org/boards/viewtopic.php?f=3&t=23511 Big Centipede fucked around with this message at 07:38 on Jun 26, 2013 |
# ? Jun 26, 2013 07:32 |
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Improbable Lobster posted:Guess who got a second tarantula today? (Don't guess, it was me) E. murinus likes: - High humidity - Lots of substrate to burrow - Heavily webbing the entrance to its burrow - Having urticating hairs on its pedipalps
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# ? Jun 26, 2013 07:55 |
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Sir Azrael posted:E. murinus likes: Big Centipede posted:I've never had an E. murinus, but I've had a few E.cyanognathus before and I kept them quite a bit more humid than a rosie would like. Thanks. I guess I'll get to work on setting up a basic burrow.
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# ? Jun 26, 2013 08:53 |
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Really excited about this invertebrate threat! Earlier this month I received some cecropia moth eggs and I’m eager to share. Order: Lepidoptera (Moths, butterflies, skippers, etc.) Family: Saturniidae (Silk Moths) Hyalophora cecropia, Linnaeus 1758 Cecropia moths are a fairly common species in the North America, these individuals are from the Midwest. They’re well known for the gorgeous coloration of adults. They’re among the largest moths in North America with a wingspan of 4.25 – 6 in (110 - 150 cm). The only, obvious, physical difference between the sexes are the plumose antennae of the males. These sensitive antennae allow the males to detect female sex pheromone from miles away. Please excuse this terrible phone pic. But my favorites are the caterpillars! The larvae go through 5 larval instars (growing phase between molts). The 4th instar is spectacular; a plump green hotdog with a series of spiky red and yellow knobs running down its back (I’ll post pictures of these in a few weeks). I’ve been feeding them silver maple leaves but I’ve tried a few others and they seem to be big fans of black cherry leaves. (Host range includes: dogwood, poplar, cherries, box elder, buckthorn, larch, apple, hawthorn, birch, elderberry, silver maple, alder, willow, privet and peony) The 1st instar caterpillars were about the size of long grain rice and all black. They’re currently in 2nd instar. The largest is about the size of a Good n’ Plenty and they now have yellow bodies with black spots and projections. I’ll try to take pictures of all of the instars and eventually the cocoons to share their progress. Bouseman, J. K. and J. G. Sternburg. 2002. Field Guide to Silkmoths of Illinois. pp. 69-74. Illinois Natural History Survey, Champaign, IL.
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# ? Jul 13, 2013 22:58 |
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Those moths are gorgeous! I just found a bunch of tansy worms that turn into Cinnabar moths. They are really pretty: I also just got a dermestarium and have started cleaning bones. I will snap some pics once I get it set up...outside. They are cleaning a quail for me right now.
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# ? Jul 14, 2013 06:14 |
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# ? May 4, 2024 13:07 |
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That cinnabar moth is beautiful, I've never seen a tiger moth like that. Looked up the caterpillars and they're really cute too!Pardalis posted:
That's awesome. One of my friends set up something similar in her backyard and got great results. I think she ended up with carrion beetles and a few other critters along the way but totally worth it; the deer and opossum skulls looked great.
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# ? Jul 15, 2013 21:23 |