Mine are sub-adults still, about 1" long so gotta wait on mine as well. i do have multiples though so I should still have some to trade with you brian if you still want at that point.
I have some serrulatus, if you still need some when your stigmurus start producing I'll trade you 1:1
It shouldn't take too long, they are good eaters and grow fast.
http://www.beanfarm.com/store/agora.cgi
http://www.superiorenterprise.com/
www.watersorb.com (water crystals for feeder crickets and roaches, is not used for scorps and t's.)
They might live on it, but they won't thrive and reproduce which is the point of a self sustaining feeder colony. Need a source of moisture and some decent food to get them reproducing. they won't waste their energy on reproducing when they are being fed cardboard only.
Here a pic from when I first set it up
The breeders have a private area to breed and do roach things and the tubes I empty into a plastic tub to feed out of. The ones on the bottom usually have ~100 in them. I keep a heat mat under the cork tile setup so they can move and thermoregulate...
I'd totally be down for giving them away to people who send me the packing materials and pay for shipping, I'll probably do that in a couple months when my colony rebounds. The chickens is an excellent idea, my neighbor has some, not sure how he would feel about the roaches though {D
Anyone...
The main reason I have too many is because most of my collection of scorps aren't big enough for adult dubias, and if they are, it's such a big meal they are full for 2 weeks at least. So I have way too many breeders in there. Lobsters are the perfect size feeder for me but I don't want any...
It is dubia's I'm raising, and it isn't that cheap to sell them off when you have none of the required packing materials, and would have to buy them in bulk just to get started. And also when there are far more reputable people than I selling 100-150 for 20 bucks, it just isn't worth the...
They are way bigger than 4 cm, the places you looked were wrong, here is one of the definitive scorpion sites which lists it as 10cm (4"). This measurement is from the tip of the head to tip of the tail, not counting the claws.
http://www.ub.ntnu.no/scorpion-files/a_australis.php
Yeah top and bottom are definitely males, the middle is probably a sub-adult since you said it was smaller, females are almost always bigger than the males, or the same size at least.
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