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Thank you for posting this vid. The beetles look awesome. I wish there was a good, safe, culturable analog here in the U.S. (if there is, I don't know of that beetle!). I even thought about the Japanese Beetles that are a pest invasion here as a possible food source, but all of the pesticides used on them make me write them off.
I even started collecting and feeding bumblebees this past summer, and my chams went crazy for them. And for those who will caution me against insects with stingers, I carefully monitored more than 50 instances of them being eaten, with not one single injury or issue. They seem to instinctually know that they need to chew these guys really fast to kill them. I like having a better way to get bee pollen to my chams than feeding it to crickets like I do most of the time.
Makes me want to investigate beekeeping with a double bonus of honey and cham feeders.
I will probably catch grief for this, but that is the nature of opinion and discussion.
Thank you for posting this vid. The beetles look awesome. I wish there was a good, safe, culturable analog here in the U.S. (if there is, I don't know of that beetle!). I even thought about the Japanese Beetles that are a pest invasion here as a possible food source, but all of the pesticides used on them make me write them off.
I even started collecting and feeding bumblebees this past summer, and my chams went crazy for them. And for those who will caution me against insects with stingers, I carefully monitored more than 50 instances of them being eaten, with not one single injury or issue. They seem to instinctually know that they need to chew these guys really fast to kill them. I like having a better way to get bee pollen to my chams than feeding it to crickets like I do most of the time.
Makes me want to investigate beekeeping with a double bonus of honey and cham feeders.
I will probably catch grief for this, but that is the nature of opinion and discussion.
try to get the Japanese beetles and breed them, then there will be no concern of pesticides...
Where did you guys get your starter stock on these, if you don't mind me asking? I think I want to get both of these, the scarab ones you are talking about as well as the stinkbug type I posted a link to above. They have different diets and should be interesting to see how they compare in reproductive efficiency and palatability by the chams.
Seems like an easy project to get going if I can find suitable starters.
Thank you for posting this vid. The beetles look awesome. I wish there was a good, safe, culturable analog here in the U.S. (if there is, I don't know of that beetle!).
the larva look a lot like june bug larva , and don't june bugs have the same diet ?
those things are everywhere here in California !! my male panther has take down a couple when I let him free range in my back yard !
June/May beetle larvae feed on plant roots. In the Philippines, scarabid beetles were feeding in tree foliage, and people were capturing them by using sweep nets. They were for human food.Most scarab larvae looks very similar, so its hard to judge by larvae.
Phyllophaga (June Bug Genus) are new world scarabs only, AFAIK.
June bugs around here, are much much larger than the Harlequins or Pachnoda, which are only about 1/2 inch long.
Even if not Pachnoda, they are pretty much 100% Scarabs, and Flower Scarabs (or Fruit) judging by their diet. So June Bugs, Harlequins, are quite similar US versions.
June/May beetle larvae feed on plant roots. In the Philippines, scarabid beetles were feeding in tree foliage, and people were capturing them by using sweep nets. They were for human food.
Good point, but June Bugs are Scarabs I believe.
However Flower/Fruit Scarabs Larvae eat Decaying Leaf Litter, and decaying/fermented Wood. Not live trees and plants.
What kind of scarab are they eating? Do they eat the Larvae or the Beetles? Thats interesting to know, that humans eat them. I have heard that Reptiles dont care much for the beetles as they have a bitter taste, have you ever eaten one? It would seem chameleons enjoy them, but apparently some reptiles dont care for them.
Timon and Pumba defiantly make them look appeasing, the big fat creme filled kind .