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About dubia roach or Crickert

packiller32

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Anyone using Dubia replace crickert to feed dragon ?
I would like to buy as much as dubia i can to replace crickert.
what you guys think?

Thanks you
 
I switched over to B.Dubia roaches and IMO they are MUCH better than crickets in every way.

Easier to handle.
Easy to propagate.
Far less odor.
Far cheaper (if raised at home).
Higher meat to shell ratio than crickets.
Various sizes available at all times if a colony is maintained. Babies are small enough to feed to extremely small lizards, and adult Dubia are more than big enough for the largest bearded dragons.
Very low mortality. I might find one dead Dubia a week in two bins.

I seldom buy crickets anymore, and I'm glad not to.
 
Forgot to mention above I am feeding four BDs; one small (7-8"), two juveniles (a 15" rescue and my 19" "Baby") and an older adult rescue (19").
 
I switched over to B.Dubia roaches and IMO they are MUCH better than crickets in every way.

Easier to handle.
Easy to propagate.
Far less odor.
Far cheaper (if raised at home).
Higher meat to shell ratio than crickets.
Various sizes available at all times if a colony is maintained. Babies are small enough to feed to extremely small lizards, and adult Dubia are more than big enough for the largest bearded dragons.
Very low mortality. I might find one dead Dubia a week in two bins.

I seldom buy crickets anymore, and I'm glad not to.

Thanks you !! I am having around 3000 Dubia right now, around 400 female Audlt and 500 Male Audlt, i just buy it from my local dealer, Currently i have 20 dragons , so how much more dubia should i buy now? to support my dragons daily and make a good rotation?

Thanks !
 
Thanks you !! I am having around 3000 Dubia right now, around 400 female Audlt and 500 Male Audlt, i just buy it from my local dealer, Currently i have 20 dragons , so how much more dubia should i buy now? to support my dragons daily and make a good rotation?

Thanks !

3000 pair audlt? maybe??
 
I'm sorry that I do not know the answer to your question.

I am fairly certain that a colony of 3,000 roaches will not be enough for 20 BDs, but I cannot quantify that or tell you how many you should have.
 
You can try to plan accordingly based on the repoductive rate: you'll have to ultimately make the calculations because it all depends on approximately how many you feed on a daily basis.

You can expect a single female Blaptica dubia to produce about 20 offspring per month, I like to have 2-3 reproducing adult females for every nymph that I feed off on a daily basis. This allows you to hold back a few nymphs each month that the female produces to replace retired breeders or adults that pass on. You ideally want to keep a ratio of approximately 1 adult male to 3 females.

From your 400 adult females, your looking at a production of approximately 250 nymphs per day. You want to always set aside a few to keep the colony going as well. If you feed more than this on a daily basis, you should consider increasing the size of your colony to let it become well established. You can never have too many roaches; it's when you don't have enough that you run into trouble = )

Also, for best reproductive success: Keep them warm, have a good quality high protein diet available at all times (preferably very fine), and a water source/fresh veggies available. Try to keep them dark and refrain from disturbing them as much as possible. I'd suggest having at least two different bins for the size colony you will be maintaining - 1 for the adult breeders and one for rearing nymphs into feeders. It's easy to separate the baby nymphs from the adults periodically to add them to the feeder colony.

I remember the days when I was ordering thousands of crickets online weekly - them smelled, the chirped, they were dirty, and they are escape artists. Roaches Rock = ) And in the long run they are much cheaper and wayyyy less hassle amonst the points that were already made.
 
You can try to plan accordingly based on the repoductive rate: you'll have to ultimately make the calculations because it all depends on approximately how many you feed on a daily basis.

You can expect a single female Blaptica dubia to produce about 20 offspring per month, I like to have 2-3 reproducing adult females for every nymph that I feed off on a daily basis. This allows you to hold back a few nymphs each month that the female produces to replace retired breeders or adults that pass on. You ideally want to keep a ratio of approximately 1 adult male to 3 females.

From your 400 adult females, your looking at a production of approximately 250 nymphs per day. You want to always set aside a few to keep the colony going as well. If you feed more than this on a daily basis, you should consider increasing the size of your colony to let it become well established. You can never have too many roaches; it's when you don't have enough that you run into trouble = )

Also, for best reproductive success: Keep them warm, have a good quality high protein diet available at all times (preferably very fine), and a water source/fresh veggies available. Try to keep them dark and refrain from disturbing them as much as possible. I'd suggest having at least two different bins for the size colony you will be maintaining - 1 for the adult breeders and one for rearing nymphs into feeders. It's easy to separate the baby nymphs from the adults periodically to add them to the feeder colony.

I remember the days when I was ordering thousands of crickets online weekly - them smelled, the chirped, they were dirty, and they are escape artists. Roaches Rock = ) And in the long run they are much cheaper and wayyyy less hassle amonst the points that were already made.

Thanks you !! I am going to buy 1500 more female Audlt dubia then, becoz i wanna feeding off them asap.
 
I've jumped on the dubia bandwagon as well - - I love them. I've got a few sets of "breeding adults" set aside in a dark cabinet with thermostat-controlled flexwatt underneath the enclosures, and I've been feeding them on a superfine high quality diet (puppy food and the like) - - and essentially "forgot" about them for a month, and now I have a GIANT colony. They breed like crazy, and all of my beardies and all of my geckos (and even my big White's tree frogs) love love love them.

Looking at all that math though, I have this overwhelming feeling that with my growing reptiles, I will have to up my collection, haha.

And I agree, crickets are supremely nasty, and I would like to be rid of them forever if at all possible.
 
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