Hello there.
I have a question regarding the possibility of females molting after laying eggs.
I have a few Honduran curly hairs, Tliltocatl albopilosus, all raised from slings by me. A male mated with a female last November (~2.5-3 years since I bought them as slings), and she laid an egg sack roughly in March of this year, the eggs never hatched and decomposed. She may have mated with the male again around June after gaining her weight back. Her abdomen became quite swollen after the mating, I assumed it was either more eggs or the diet. The male perished about a week ago from the making of this post. Strangely, today I found a fresh shed from her in the enclosure.
The male and female are not housed together, only for 1-2 week durations when I try to mate them.
So my questions are, how was it possible for the spider to lay eggs prior to their final molt? And does the fact that she wasn't in her final instar explain the infertile eggs?
Looking forward to y'all's opinions on this matter. Thanks.
Best regards,
M.
I have a question regarding the possibility of females molting after laying eggs.
I have a few Honduran curly hairs, Tliltocatl albopilosus, all raised from slings by me. A male mated with a female last November (~2.5-3 years since I bought them as slings), and she laid an egg sack roughly in March of this year, the eggs never hatched and decomposed. She may have mated with the male again around June after gaining her weight back. Her abdomen became quite swollen after the mating, I assumed it was either more eggs or the diet. The male perished about a week ago from the making of this post. Strangely, today I found a fresh shed from her in the enclosure.
The male and female are not housed together, only for 1-2 week durations when I try to mate them.
So my questions are, how was it possible for the spider to lay eggs prior to their final molt? And does the fact that she wasn't in her final instar explain the infertile eggs?
Looking forward to y'all's opinions on this matter. Thanks.
Best regards,
M.