snow white dubia

briarpatch10

Arachnosquire
Joined
Jun 21, 2010
Messages
67
I found a snow white dubia in my feeder tank tonight and just wanted to share
 
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Terry D

Arachnodemon
Old Timer
Joined
Nov 21, 2009
Messages
733
Briarpatch, Nice recently molted indiv! :clap:
 

evicton

Arachnoknight
Old Timer
Joined
May 19, 2009
Messages
230
I remember the first time I seen a freshly molted dubia, I was like wow this must be rare, then I did a search. Though I still get excited when I see one cause my lizards love them when there are squishy like that lol.
 

malevolentrobot

Arachnobaron
Old Timer
Joined
Jan 21, 2010
Messages
310
feed it out, especially to a picky eater! thats the only time my rosea will eat dubia, if they've freshly moulted.
 

Offkillter

Arachnosquire
Joined
Jun 18, 2010
Messages
149
Oh my word!There it is,the rare and elusive albino dubia.I'd feed off that one first that's what it gets for being different!!! :)
 

Obelisk

Arachnobaron
Old Timer
Joined
Jun 15, 2009
Messages
337
The first recently molted dubia that I saw was in fact only the head and thorax, which the legs still moving. This was when I had just received them, and apparently the rest of them got hungry along the way. Anyway, it was fairly creepy.
 

maxi_kdu

Arachnopeon
Joined
Dec 25, 2007
Messages
48
I did an experiment that i put this kinda white dubia into the fridge to freeze, then it remained white and soft all the time whenever defreezed.
 

Miss Bianca

Arachnoprince
Old Timer
Joined
May 14, 2008
Messages
1,145
The first recently molted dubia that I saw was in fact only the head and thorax, which the legs still moving. This was when I had just received them, and apparently the rest of them got hungry along the way. Anyway, it was fairly creepy.
Not cool at all.

. . . . . . Oh and lol @ 'chewy' dubias..

I did an experiment that i put this kinda white dubia into the fridge to freeze, then it remained white and soft all the time whenever defreezed.
Interesting!

Here's one of my favorite shots.

 
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Crysta

Arachnoprince
Old Timer
Joined
Feb 18, 2005
Messages
1,475
The first recently molted dubia that I saw was in fact only the head and thorax, which the legs still moving. This was when I had just received them, and apparently the rest of them got hungry along the way. Anyway, it was fairly creepy.
I laughed so bad - wasn't creepy at all.
ohhh a white dubia - take a picture of it - shows it off to us - goes to look at it - oh it's a ghost of its former image... ;)
 

Scoolman

Arachnolord
Old Timer
Joined
Feb 9, 2010
Messages
612
When I find freshly molted hissers I feed them to my G pulchra; call them roach veal.
 
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