- Joined
- Apr 20, 2011
- Messages
- 1,652
Thanks for the question. I have done both with this species. I think I will leave the babies with the Mom and raise them. I normally keep this species communally. I had 2 other females and 2 other males that I removed this morning when I saw the babies on her back. She and the babies now have their own enclosure.Nice, do you have them in a communal setup to stay with the mother, or do you plan on separating them when they leave her back?
Thanks!Thanks!I haven't seen much about this species in a while; it's good to see that you are breeding them! Good luck with the babies!
I find these guys every weekend down here in Texas haha, very common scorp down here!I haven't seen much about this species in a while; it's good to see that you are breeding them! Good luck with the babies!
Know what you mean, one time I found what looked like at least 100 in one rotten log here. I came back and pulled 30 or so from it. Considered a big pest here, VERY common here, I could catch several tonight in my back yard with a blight. Still a interesting scorpion to keep though, take down full grown crix. Hard to find one with babies, and people seem to have a hard time getting them through instars. You going to try it Cracker?I find these guys every weekend down here in Texas haha, very common scorp down here!
Ya...lol. I'm gonna try. Like you guys I can get 30 in 30 minutes in my yard. : )Know what you mean, one time I found what looked like at least 100 in one rotten log here. I came back and pulled 30 or so from it. Considered a big pest here, VERY common here, I could catch several tonight in my back yard with a blight. Still a interesting scorpion to keep though, take down full grown crix. Hard to find one with babies, and people seem to have a hard time getting them through instars. You going to try it Cracker?
There are a few that I suspect are gravid.It looks like a couple of those in the second picture are either gravid or in pre-molt.
Yeah! I've heard about the numbers of scorpions! It was just that I hadn't seen many pictures of the species in a while, and I haven't seen them being bred in captivity much recently. I guess it makes sense; there are so many in the wild that there's no need to breed them! It's good that you have hundreds in your backyard.I find these guys every weekend down here in Texas haha, very common scorp down here!
I live just south of you, and pretty much any wooded/rocky area should have some. I've noticed (in Oklahoma at least) that I see higher concentrations in the wooded/rocky areas surrounding lakes. Just go out at night with a black light and you should see some. I saw some on trees, walking thru the grass, walking thru parking lots, under rocks and even on/inside buildings around Lake Thunderbird, OK.I can't seem to find ANY in my area, which is Kansas.
The pictures look awesome!
I have a black light and I don't know where and when to specifically look.