Abhorsen
Arachnoknight
- Joined
- Mar 2, 2016
- Messages
- 221
What does L means in L1 L2 L3 for tarantulas, thanks
Instar level. Each moult is an instar.What does L means in L1 L2 L3 for tarantulas, thanks
In the Tarantula world, instar is measured by 1i, 2i, 3i and so on.I mean that’s how I’ve always referred to instars. L1, L2, etc.
Yeah I come from the mantid world and insect world!In the Tarantula world, instar is measured by 1i, 2i, 3i and so on.
In mantid world its L1, L2, L3, etc... L is short for Larvae.
Maybe the OP can clarify if he is speaking of Legs or instar now that he knows they are different.
Thanks for clarification, I didn’t know there was 2 threads. Had me second guessing myself on the meaning, lol.The other post was removed because the same thread was started in both sub-forums. Moderators would not delete your post because it was incorrect. The one in the other sub-forum was removed altogether.
It is a reference to what instar the animal is at, not what size they are or their anatomy.
Here in the states, we refer to the instars as 1i, 2i, 3i and so on...in Europe however, they do often use L1, L2, L3, etc. Same difference.In the Tarantula world, instar is measured by 1i, 2i, 3i and so on.
In mantid world its L1, L2, L3, etc... L is short for Larvae.
Maybe the OP can clarify if he is speaking of Legs or instar now that he knows they are different.
In the states it is but in Europe it's either L1/L2 or 1fh/2fhIn the Tarantula world, instar is measured by 1i, 2i, 3i and so on.
It's the abbreviation of larva or larval stage, and yes we use it for tarantulas too (beside mantids, crickets, locusts, moths, etc.).Hi guys, thanks for the reply. But I literally mean the L in L1 L2 L3, I know they're the number of molts but what does L means? In the mantids I know it's larven, but how about in tarantulas?
Why would mantid enthusiasts count the larval stages when they don't have a larval stage? The praying mantis has a nymphal stage, but not a larval. I'm confused with the Ln (L1, L2, etc.) when used with spiders as well since they don't have a larval stage either; just embryo (egg), postembryo, then start counting instars/ stadia.In the Tarantula world, instar is measured by 1i, 2i, 3i and so on.
In mantid world its L1, L2, L3, etc... L is short for Larvae.
Maybe the OP can clarify if he is speaking of Legs or instar now that he knows they are different.
People tend to use it as a generic term for every young arthropod, tarantulas included, it’s inaccurate of course, an old habit I guess, that's why most sellers started to give the number of molts after first instar or body length instead (at least here).Why would mantid enthusiasts count the larval stages when they don't have a larval stage? The praying mantis has a nymphal stage, but not a larval. I'm confused with the Ln (L1, L2, etc.) when used with spiders as well since they don't have a larval stage either; just embryo (egg), postembryo, then start counting instars/ stadia.