




L in Ontario wrote:
How are your farms doing Janine and Donna?
The pupae don't eat anything, they are dorment.Finch Fry wrote:The pupae (alien) eats the worm.
Grain mites. Harmless.lovemyfinch wrote:Big, Big question.Last night I finally started a 3rd bin taking out all the beetles to let them lay in another bin. In the bin that they were in I could see the bran moving around, so I put a tiny amount under a childrens bug microscope. What I have are a bunch of tiny little white microscopic things moving around.
Are these meal worms or did I breed something completely new.
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Please, Please answer, for the time being they don't look like anthing.
Hi, my husband is a Entomologist, I showed him your picture. He said the beetle looks like a common ground beetle. Your colony of mealies probably got infested either before or after you bought your original batch of mealies. The mealies grow into what is called a darkling beetle.dfcauley wrote:Thanks for sharing that with me.
Anyway raising mealworms, I would love to hear from you. Do you remove the beetles? I NEVER saw any worms...... perhaps they did eat them. But I still wonder what those white looking things are.....
To whose pic are you referring? All of the pics in this thread show darkling beetles. I can tell tell you this on good authority because I also have a background in entomology.cindy wrote:Hi, my husband is a Entomologist, I showed him your picture. He said the beetle looks like a common ground beetle. Your colony of mealies probably got infested either before or after you bought your original batch of mealies. The mealies grow into what is called a darkling beetle.dfcauley wrote:Thanks for sharing that with me.
Anyway raising mealworms, I would love to hear from you. Do you remove the beetles? I NEVER saw any worms...... perhaps they did eat them. But I still wonder what those white looking things are.....
We used to raise them for our reptiles, mostly crested geckos and various lizards. We replaces the contents of the original container they were shipped in with either oatmeal or bran flakes (grind it). Supplement them with apple slices, carrots. Remove the fruit after a few hours and the substrate around the fruit so as to not grow any mold from moisture left behind by the fruit. Whatever your mealies eat the birds benefit from. You can gut load the mealies with fruits, sweet potato slices and veggies.
..........................................................................................................mike wrote:To whose pic are you referring? All of the pics in this thread show darkling beetles. I can tell tell you this on good authority because I also have a background in entomology.cindy wrote:Hi, my husband is an Entomologist, I showed him your picture. He said the beetle looks like a common ground beetle. Your colony of mealies probably got infested either before or after you bought your original batch of mealies. The mealies grow into what is called a darkling beetle.dfcauley wrote:Thanks for sharing that with me.
Anyway raising mealworms, I would love to hear from you. Do you remove the beetles? I NEVER saw any worms...... perhaps they did eat them. But I still wonder what those white looking things are.....
We used to raise them for our reptiles, mostly crested geckos and various lizards. We replaces the contents of the original container they were shipped in with either oatmeal or bran flakes (grind it). Supplement them with apple slices, carrots. Remove the fruit after a few hours and the substrate around the fruit so as to not grow any mold from moisture left behind by the fruit. Whatever your mealies eat the birds benefit from. You can gut load the mealies with fruits, sweet potato slices and veggies.
We need to stop putting fear into everyone's minds about breeding mealworms (darkling beetles). It's the easiest thing in the world and requires next to nothing to do. The worst pests you'll find in the mealworm bin are the mealworms themselves and I'm being dramatic even when I write that.
This was apparently my downfall, I had read on one of he posts to put in a damp sponge. But now have read that this would bee too much humidity, causing mites , which had been my problem. So I dumped out the bin with mites, after removing the beetles. Hopefully this time things will work out. In the meantime, I guess I'll have to keep buying mealies at the pet store. Argh.mickp wrote:I dont add any water to my colonies, they get moisture from the fruit & veg I give them, carrot, cucumber, apple etc