I have been trying to breed brown crickets for months now. The weather recently warmed up and now all of a sudden I have hundreds of pin head sized crickets! Problem is they have been the same size for 2 weeks. I have them in a 10 gallon tank on coco husk. Plenty of food, veggies, and cricket water gel. They have many places to climb/hide, warm temps (80's) and even a UVB lamp. (I had an extra lying around.) How do I make them grow? How many weeks before they are considered full grown?
80 is okay but they'll still take a while to grow at that rate. Pinheads prefer hotter temperatures. I would see if I can maybe get it to the 90s.
As for how many weeks before they are full grown, I can't really answer that. Mine seem to grow at different rates. I notice crickets that aren't yet adults don't have wings, thus you can still see their white and black striped bodies. (We're talking about house crickets right?)
V (Pictures of crickets that are getting big but aren't quite adults.)
Another way to tell is females tend to have a long, tail like thing, coming out of their ,er rear when they molt for their final time. Males don't and they chirp.
V Here's a picture of one of my adult female crickets. Unfortunately for this shot, it was sitting pretty close to the younger ones so I had to point the camera to the far left. (Cricket is on the far right.Keeping a cricket cage is like keeping a farm, it's very hard to keep clean. I just gave them that egg crate a week or 2 ago!)
Now I have a few questions. What are you using for them to lay eggs in? How hot is your UVB lamp?
Ah.Thanks. Unfortunately for me my understanding of crickets is limited to experience/breeding faqs. And most breeding faqs I find on the internet are limited to instructions on their care. I would love to know more about how they mate/their biology but alas, the local library is smaller then our foodmart.
Thanks Crystal!
I guess the temps are to blame. I am now the owner of approx 3 week old pinheads! Lol! They seem healthy and there are tons of them...they are too small to feed to my animals unfortunately.
I use moist coco husk- the kind that is ground very fine like dirt for the crickets to lay in. I left the babies on the coco husk, i spray it daily to keep it moist. The UVB bulb puts out very little heat. I do have a extra heat mat already attached to the cricket tank. (Left over from gecko cage.) Do you think that would be beneficial?
Congrats Julia, I know how exciting it is when you get baby feeders. It never gets old. It's like we are providing for our children but Frogs![]()
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