Hello!
I wanted to see how everyone on here(that breeds bsf obviously) breeds and cares for their bsf larvae. I never had any luck breeding them in the past and I really would like to try again because my beardie eats ALOT and I'm very worried that I'm not giving her enough. I did see somewhere that you should have holes for the flies to fly in and out but I don't know if I'd be able to do that inside or outside(parasites and other bugs!). I also don't know what to use for their substrate. Overall, I'd like to find a way to have a sustainable supply of food for her. So far I feed her bsf and superworms but I will hopefully switch out the superworms for Discoid roaches soon! If you have any advice on discoid roach breeding that would be very helpful too! Any other suggestions for easy to breed nutritious insects for beardies is especially helpful aswell.
Thanks.
I haven't raised BSFL, but when I store them, I keep them at room temp in the container they arrive in and they do well enough. There is an article on here that goes into some details about growing/raising them that may be helpful https://www.beardeddragon.org/articles/growing-phoenix-worms/
I believe discoid roaches are similar to dubias in their care. I keep my dubias in cardboard tubes for housing. They have a heat projector (similar to ceramic heat emitter) overhead to keep them warm (they live in my cellar). I have a plate on the opposite end of the tank for their food which consists mainly of leftover veges. They love pumpkin and squash. Sometimes I give them some fruit or bread slices or some oats.
I haven't raised BSFL, but when I store them, I keep them at room temp in the container they arrive in and they do well enough. There is an article on here that goes into some details about growing/raising them that may be helpful https://www.beardeddragon.org/articles/growing-phoenix-worms/
I believe discoid roaches are similar to dubias in their care. I keep my dubias in cardboard tubes for housing. They have a heat projector (similar to ceramic heat emitter) overhead to keep them warm (they live in my cellar). I have a plate on the opposite end of the tank for their food which consists mainly of leftover veges. They love pumpkin and squash. Sometimes I give them some fruit or bread slices or some oats.
Yeah a heat mat should work too, just be sure to prop the tank on a bakers rack or similar so that it allows for ventilation underneath so the mat doesn't overheat which can be a fire risk.