Yeah, once I ran out of chow for my silks and before the new chow arrived, they had already died, poor guys. :(
The dead worms really did start to "liquify", and it was pretty gross. I think that's about the closest I've seen to "silkworm soup" lol.
I'm assuming he is talking about these: https://www.google.com/search?q=green+stink+bug&rlz=1C1CHBF_enUS863US863&source=lnms&tbm=isch&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwj3nIzYxLnqAhWhGDQIHaJyD_cQ_AUoAXoECCEQAw&biw=1396&bih=686
There are a different species from the brown marmorated stink bug.
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Interesting idea. I don't think stink bugs need a diapause, my understanding is that stink bugs become inactive during the cold months, and they only start to breed during the warmer months, and the young become adults before winter.
Hahaha, I get being cheap, I want to save money too, but not at the animal's expense. People should be going for the maximum, not some arbitrary minimum.
I wasn’t saying it wasn’t an issue. I‘ve seen plenty of pictures of impacted dragons. That said, I still believe if your husbandry is good, loose sub is not dangerous. But yeah, I’ve seen beardies kept on straight sand in a twenty gallon with an insufficient basking spot, and I wouldn’t be...
Yeah, I agree about your point on digging. But I still think that the impaction risk is overblown. If your husbandry is on point, and you have a healthy dragon, they should be okay. Most reptiles can pass small amounts of dirt fine, I personally think that the “loose substrate is a death...
Here's a link to a blog where it lists the stuff you can use to gutload silkworms - again, probably not good for the worms long term, but if you are only using other foods for a short time before you feed them off it should be fine...
Yeah, unless you have access to fresh mulberry leaves, I would buy the chow. I've heard of people giving them other foods, but it's not a long term solution if you want to keep them alive.
Agreed - but I also think that a SAFE loose substrate is good to use with healthy adult beardies. It's what they live on in the wild after all. Beardies are natural diggers and I think we should allow them to dig.