why is it that i cant breed any foods for frogs i tried mealworms,crickets,and nightcrawler. Some of my nightcrawler ended up dying because the newspaper(as cover on top) got blown away.... but i still have some can they still breed to hundreds i estimate they are about 30 worms.and also im trying mealworms again.... will my nigthcrawler still breed??
Cricket culturing guide: http://www.frogforum.net/care-articl...e-cricket.html
Are your Nightcrawlers Lumbricus terrestris? They need cool temperatures and are very slow at breeding. You might look into other varieties that are easier to culture.
Mealworms are pretty easy, I keep mine in a shoebox sized tupperware bin in a substrate made from ground up oats, bran, and other gran type products. They get fresh veggie scraps every couple of days as a source of moisture. Other than that they are left alone to do their own thing. Their lifecycle will take a few months depending on temperature, so be patient especially since the eggs are tiny and very hard to see. They seem to still breed down to 16C or so, but are more productive at higher temperatures.
But how can i prevent too much fruit flies,flies,and ants they're killing all my feeders!!!
Keep your feeders in sealed bins with ventilation holes covered up with fine screening to keep out pests. Ants can't climb vaseline very well, so a ring of it around the container on the outside will discourage them or a product like Tanglefoot will also work. You can get fruit fly traps or make your own (google 'fruit fly trap').
Make sure nothing that goes in your feeder bins can be harboring pests or the eggs of pests. Clean out the cricket bin every week or more frequently if pests appear.
An effective one what? A fruit fly trap? A basic one is just a plastic bottle with holes punched in the side and some liquid bait at the bottom. This isn't to catch fruit flies alive and feed to your amphibians, but to help control your problem. Good sanitation and secure breeding containers for your feeders is most important though.
I can't see how getting sick from fruit flies would be possible. Don't try to capture and breed the ones that fly around and invade your kitchen, if you want to raise fruit flies read this Frog Forum - Fruit Fly Culturing, Care and Feeding - Everything you need to know about Drosophila
Because I red at one of the books in out library it was titled "Grade A Science Projects" forgot the author and saw breeding melanogaster,and it said place a banana and leave it for 30 mins after several flies are seen take a towel and secure with a rubber band.and after a few days little maggots will be shown and it said if i have done my experiment ,discard the flies by placing it in a freezer,and it says because fruit flies carry disease! can i take these steps???and also do they really carry disease?
A quick google search suggests they can pick up bacteria from stuff they land on (like rotting meat), but I'd expect this isn't likely to be a problem unless you're wallowing in filth. This definitely shouldn't be an issue if you are culturing the flightless version, which is the only sane thing to do if you plan to use them as feeders, as they should come from a clean source and you control their diet and living environment.
The fruit flies you have are pests, so killing them off in the freezer would be a good idea anyway.
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