Ramrod
Chameleon Enthusiast
Yeah I have and you are so right. They dissappear in no time. Gotta be quickI take it you have never dropped one in carpet. You have never seen a worm burrow so quickly...
AAAAAnd its gone
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Yeah I have and you are so right. They dissappear in no time. Gotta be quickI take it you have never dropped one in carpet. You have never seen a worm burrow so quickly...
AAAAAnd its gone
That is nightmare fuel for me. I'm so skittish around supers, even with the foot long tongs. Lol. My own kid makes fun of me.I often think I’m sticking my hand into a sarlac pit when I work with these guys. Vicious buggers.
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I've fed them by hand and otherwise to my beardie for the past year+Don't they bite? That's why I don't hand feed them
Yes, and they can turn up days later a room or two away...I take it you have never dropped one in carpet. You have never seen a worm burrow so quickly...
AAAAAnd its gone
I've fed them by hand and otherwise to my beardie for the past year+
If I've ever been bitten, it was a non-event, or I think I'd recall it more vividly.
I agree, if it ever happened, a horrible death would result.
It would promptly be eaten alive by a reptile. AHHHHH!!!
Haha! Good one! ? ? ? ?
When I got supers for the first time for Carly, they lasted forever! ? ?Those things will live forever if kept together. They will only get so big and their max size is still good to feed adults.
Cold turkey is the way to go if breaking a habit but it'll sometimes make you pull your hair out?
Oh heck no!!!!! They actually ate their way out?? That is not cool with me!!!!I've fed them by hand and otherwise to my beardie for the past year+
If I've ever been bitten, it was a non-event, or I think I'd recall it more vividly.
I agree, if it ever happened, a horrible death would result.
It would promptly be eaten alive by a reptile. AHHHHH!!!
Yes, and they can turn up days later a room or two away...
I didn't learn this from dropping one, but from their eating their way out of a thick plastic container.
https://www.chameleonforums.com/thr...s-beetle-in-kitchen-sink.177841/#post-1599655
In one way, it's actually very cool...Oh heck no!!!!! They actually ate their way out?? That is not cool with me!!!!
- Superworms can eat and live well with Styrofoam as sole diet.
- Depolymerization of ingested Styrofoam occurred within the superworms’ guts.
- Up to 36.7% of ingested Styrofoam was mineralized into CO2.
- Gut microbiota plays a key role in the biodegradation of PS within the guts.
Perhaps the best known species is Zophobas morio, a beetle whose larvae are robust mealworms sold as food for pets such as lizards. The larvae are known commonly as "superworms".[2]
Zophobas atratus is also used as pet food, sold in pet stores[3] under the name "giant mealworms", but should not be confused with darkling beetle mealworms sprayed with juvenile hormone.[4] Studies have found that in the wild the larvae sometimes live in bat guano, and they tend to cannibalize the pupae of their own species.[5] Researchers have discovered that the larvae can subsist on a diet solely of polystyrene (Styrofoam).[6]
Not polystyrene, but I guess they weren't as picky eaters as some reptiles."5" signifies polypropylene (PP) (auto parts, industrial fibres, food containers, etc.)