Drezan
Arachnosquire
- Joined
- Sep 13, 2018
- Messages
- 54
The title says it all.
How do I know if it's a males final molt?No, but males that have had their final molt don’t survive for that long usually after.
After the male has matured certain characters will become apparent. The presence of emboli(boxing glove like tips to the pedipalps) and in some species tibial hooks(small hooks underneath the frontmost pair of legs used in mating). I assume someone will post pictures, I would but I don't have access atm.How do I know if it's a males final molt?
All mature males will have bulbous pedipalps.How do I know if it's a males final molt?
Males can only mate after their final molt, that is when the clock starts tickingAlso do you mean if they mate after the males final molt? Or just after the molt in general?
To reiterate what I said in the other thread, you seem pretty new in the hobby. No offense, but I think you should wait a couple years before breeding, the T’s will still be there then. No need to rush things.Oh wow. Guess I better mate while I can at that point. Thanks for your help!
Keep in mind if you intend to breed (I wouldn't just starting into keeping) those spiderlings need to go somewhere. Depending on the species, this may be hundreds to even thousands of babies, and even the most iconic species don't exactly sell overnight. Just food for thought.Oh wow. Guess I better mate while I can at that point. Thanks for your help!
No but if they make it to breeding unless your fast they won’t be around long .The title says it all.
I know of people with MM Brachys/Grammos that are still going strong after more than 4 years.They live 1-3 years
Or you can trade, sell, or loan out the male. I do hate to see mature males not be used, but novice keepers can't quite prepare for what comes with pairing and caring for the slings. It is a lot of work - hundreds of slings to feed and water, plus working with buyers/learning how to properly pack and ship Ts/etc.Oh wow. Guess I better mate while I can at that point. Thanks for your help!
Couldn't agree more. The crazy part is people rather just dump their question here without actually searching, thinking it's quicker. Truth is, it's faster to google than to post, and wait around for an answer, esp for those that are so basic.Dude, I have to tell you something. Reading couple of your threads you apear to be EXTREMELY new to the hobby, to the point you don't even now the bare minium of spider nature. I know that this is a amazing hobby and it's fun and it's exciting and all of that, but you really need to chill. I'm not saying that you should start with something tiny and crappy and waste years getting ready just to breed spiders, I'm saying that you need to do RESEARCH, proper research before you rush into something like this. Because when you mess something up it's not just a waste of money, you are also killing something with it and that could really make you not wanting to keep going. I am also new to this hobby and I spend hours everyday researching, looking at every forum every post every comment for thing I might need and I still feel unprepared. A good place to start is youtube, look at how people with experience do it, instead of asking every basic question on here(Not saying that's bad.... It's simply better to read instead of waiting for comments)
I'd refute that argument, if I had the energy.Society is just lazier and lazier, tha's the truth.