Ajohnson5263
Arachnosquire
- Joined
- Jan 9, 2018
- Messages
- 114
Hi, what is the largest species of US native Millipede? I've searched this many times and keep getting different results. All input appreciated.
That's something I think about frequently, and one of the reasons I am hesitant to buy Orthoporus. Once it is possible to breed them sustainably, I would love to own some, but I dislike keeping millis I can't breed (polydesmids, pill millipedes, Orthoporus, etc.).Both the Narceus gordanus and americanus have twice the girth (gordanus more so, as @LawnShrimp stated) than the Orthoporus species. But the N. americanus is a lot more active than the N. gordanus and therefore make a better pet (IMO). I rarely see any of my N. gordanus and I have over 60 (+ babies+). Also, if we aren't breeding a species in captivity, how long can we collect them from the wild without negatively impacting the species?
Are you doing anything different in there setup (substrate, temp, humidity, diet ect) to see if any of these are a factor for breeding?I have some and am trying to breed them,and yes orthoporus ornatus gets the largest.
Thickness wise, yeah, but as you said ornatus is the longest.I'm pretty sure that Narceus Gordanus is the largest US species of millipede, but O. Ornatus is the longest.
Not really. I still don’t have babies yet. My first invert was an ornatus that could have been 8” and from what I’ve heard the ornatus get bigger than texicolens.Are you doing anything different in there setup (substrate, temp, humidity, diet ect) to see if any of these are a factor for breeding?
Sorry don't mean to hijack the thread here I'm just curious lol.
I would agree with everyone else and say O. Texicolens would be the longest American sp...I've seen some at least 7 inches long if not more, skinny but long and such beautiful colors.
Not just thickness, I'm presetty sure Gordanus is the largest overall due to how thick it is, if we were to calculate their overall volume. Ornatus grows longer, but it's much skinnier.Thickness wise, yeah, but as you said ornatus is the longest.
A pet store has no interest in breeding. No disrespect intended; just stating that's not why they are in business. Hopefully they understand the value in breeding programs and balance CB with WC. That's the trick.Sounds to me like we need to work on this problem lol.
If anyone could find a way to breed these it's gotta be someone on this forum...I know a pet store ain't gonna get it done![]()
I'd be very interested in knowing what he did. I have only heard of one account of this and then wasn't real sure he knew he had Oo's.I found a guy at a reptile expo who bred them, I bought some from him. I have his business card but can't find it!
I think as long as the habitat is not destroyed, harvesting can be rather intense without harming a population. Consider sustainable harvesting of seafood measured in millions of tons versus some Orthoporus counted by hand. However, I have not kept Orthoporus in nearly a decade since my goal and enjoyment is in keeping a continuous colony and they are "dead-end" pets.Also, if we aren't breeding a species in captivity, how long can we collect them from the wild without negatively impacting the species?
Good point. I suppose it’s my own conscience with a dead end pet; taking and not giving back.The difficulty with comparing size is gordanus and ornatus specimens can be quite variable, sometimes by individual but mostly by locale. I think as long as the habitat is not destroyed, harvesting can be rather intense without harming a population. Consider sustainable harvesting of seafood measured in millions of tons versus some Orthoporus counted by hand. However, I have not kept Orthoporus in nearly a decade since my goal and enjoyment is in keeping a continuous colony and they are "dead-end" pets.