- Joined
- Jul 8, 2011
- Messages
- 335
Survival is almost 100%, at most 1-2 deaths a clutch, I keep at least 10 per clutch. At F4 currently, this years clutches are all from F3 offspring,You're doing a spectacular job. What's your survival rate and how many do you keep? Or are the adults the same ones year after year? Ever have the mother eat the babies?
Well for starters, sexing them is quite tedious, you have to knock them out (via CO2 or drowning them), and push their reproductive organs out to figure out if they are male or female, which comes with a lot of risks that could be fatal to the centipede. then once you figure that out, pairing them has to go well which is arguably the easiest part, then you have to wait for them to lay a clutch which could take anywhere from a month to several years, and once they do, you cannot shine any lights on them or have any vibration near them whatsoever, this includes footsteps near the enclosure, taking the lid to the enclosure off, etc & they take roughly 2 months to hatch so they have to be left completely alone for that entire time. it’s just insanely tedious and not worth many people’s time. hopefully that changes soon though, i’d love to see them being bred in captivity consistentlyI recently went to the Pittsburgh reptile expo where I added two pedes to my collection. As I looked around asking if the centipedes that were being sold were CB many vendors stated that it’s near impossible to breed centipedes. Is there any reason for that? I am pretty new to the centipede department of invert keeping and thought they would be interesting to breed.
Also congrats on the successful breeding process, the pictures are amazing and make me even more intrigued to breed them.