As a larva? Are there any beetles that live for a fairly long time as adults?I would have to say Death Feigning Beetle. I have heard they can live up to 17 years at least.
I think he means the adults. I have still yet to hear of someone successfully rearing blue death feigner larvae to adulthood.As a larva? Are there any beetles that live for a fairly long time as adults?
Just go to the store, the beetle mat and foods have picture directions on the back of most of them.I am interested in this too. I just moved to Japan so I had to abandon my collection of critters back home, but I am interested in beetle keeping as it is popular here. I don't know Japanese well enough to learn about beetle care in that language, and the search didn't turn up much. Does anyone have any guidance?
Thanks
Aren't you able to the the giant hercules beetle in Japan? There's some youtube videos on them.I am interested in this too. I just moved to Japan so I had to abandon my collection of critters back home, but I am interested in beetle keeping as it is popular here. I don't know Japanese well enough to learn about beetle care in that language, and the search didn't turn up much. Does anyone have any guidance?
Thanks
Anthia have been breed successfully~ I forgot where specific thread here, but apparently they lay large and fragile eggs that require specific conditions to let them lay.hmmm....manticora(giant tiger beetles):drool:would be awesome to keep,if they were avail,also anthias too. diving beetles(dytiscus) are a blast to keep,and then pasimachus,which ive got now,and man are they aggressive,but to top it off i just got those giant north american black flightless tiger beetles from orin just got in:worship:these things are sick,super fast,huge mandibles,great hunters.........what more could you ask for? well......all predatory ground beetles are a blast to keep.