BepopCola
Arachnobaron
- Joined
- Oct 14, 2018
- Messages
- 418
This is good to know!No they don't, I've bred all my species of isopods on plain old coconut fiber, so long as dead leaves are placed on top of the substrate and they are offered supplemental foods too, (dog food, fruits, veggies, etc.), they do fine and thrive. Y'all are acting like they're millipedes, most of which DO need a completely nutrient rich substrate to induce decent reproduction, with isopods it's the layer of leaves on top of the substrate that's their breeding stimulus. The substrate itself only needs to serve as something to hold humidity, and something for them to burrow into, it does not need to be edible...
Orin McMonigle has reared his many isopod species on a variety of different substrates, many weren't nearly as nutrient rich as some people claim they need to be for "optimal reproduction"... Keep in mind, a lot of the isopod "bigwigs" that insist a very rich substrate is needed for breeding even the most basic of isopods also happen to sell "premium" substrates...![]()
I was just going with a "better safe than sorry" strategy with duckies, since they stay buried more often. (I also mostly keep millipedes, so I have a bias there as well)
Yeah, that's true... I have mine all scratched up because I stack them.My rub with acrylic is how easily it gets scratched which is another reason I opted for the terrarium.