Somehow, I don't think that is happening. It would be a VERY expensive, labor intensive way to create larger mealworms, and I doubt it would work. And, there are other species of beetles that already produce larger "mealworm" larvae. Far cheaper and easier to simply breed these larger species.Wasn't there just a thread in here not too long ago about meal worms being injected with hormones to create "super worms". I went back 15 pages, and searched, came up with nothing. I know I saw it somewhere.
No, I don't believe everything on wikipedia. :}Did anyone read the wiki link?
Well neither do I, but I am fairly sure this one is true.No, I don't believe everything on wikipedia. :}
2 species we're talking about here. One is the regular common boring old mealworm Tenebrio molitor. Grows a little over 1 inch. Very common. 2nd species is Zophobas morio. This is known as the superworm or kingworm. These guys grow 1.5+ inches and are much thicker. More meat to them.
Sometimes companies will expose Tenebrio molitor to hormones to grow them larger. Not as large as superworms-an intermediate size. I really doubt anything is "injected", sprayed on perhaps?
http://www.nyworms.com/giant_mealworms.htm
The hormone is generally used as a form of pest control around stables/livestock to curb fly populations. It affects the molting cycle of the larva so they don't mature. The few cases where the larva do pupate they die or the adult is sterile, IIRC. I wouldn't use giant mealworms as a food source for invertebrates just as a precaution especially if a keeper had any plans to attempt breeding.Yeah, i'm thinking hormones for that purpose would be way too expensive when you could just bread the other species to get the bigger worms. Yeast would make them explode seeing as they have a rigid chitinous exoskeleton that doesnt expand and I assume no way to expel gas.
And come on, I know people's high school teachers tell them not to use wikipedia, but I would say 99% of the content i've ever read has been correct. That looks like a perfectly sound article. Just don't write your dissertation with it.
I am not disagreeing with your statement, but wikipedia is not always the most reliable source for information.Superworms are a completely different species. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zophobas_morio
i heard they spray the mealworms with some kind of bug spray that prevents them from pupating, and when they try, they die but most don't and those that don't pupate/die grow largeri believe they feed them Brewers/bakers yeast to make them swell to about double there normal size i have brewers yeast for my fruit fly media and a mealworm colony but i have never put them together maybe i should try it
So I shouldn't feed my T "giant mealworms" I bought at Petco? I thought that they were large mealworms replaced with the word giant for marketing purposes. These mealworms range from .75-1.40 in. in length. Are these hormone-fed? Safe for Ts?The hormone is generally used as a form of pest control around stables/livestock to curb fly populations. It affects the molting cycle of the larva so they don't mature. The few cases where the larva do pupate they die or the adult is sterile, IIRC. I wouldn't use giant mealworms as a food source for invertebrates just as a precaution especially if a keeper had any plans to attempt breeding.
Another problem is with the use of common names for feeders. If in doubt as to whether you have giant mealworms or superworms is to refrigerate them. Gaint mealworms will survive but superworms will die from the cold.