- Enhanced medium (the food for larvae) to support fruit fly growth and increase ent density..
- Culture will produce thousands of flies within 2 weeks (if maintained at room temperature)..
- Compact 24oz container to save you storage space without taking away from a of medium at bottom of container..
- No harmful substances. All contents of container are safe for your pets and for children to handle: wood wool, potato-based medium supplemented with powdered ents (giving its red color), fruit fly eggs, larvae and adults..
- Newly started/prepared - culture will be innoculated with flies upon your order..
- D. melanoter fruit flies are ideal feeder insects for small or young animals. They are about half the size of their larger counterpart in the genus - D. hydei. Unlike crickets or other typical feeder insects, fruit flies cannot bite or harm your pet..
- Ideal a of media added! Not too much (where flies never get to the media and it becomes overcrowded and rancid), and not too little (where flies are left searching for food)! You'd think that more media equals more flies... Not exactly. There's only a certain a of surface area within containers where larvae can properly pupate and emerge as flies. If ther is too much media (and if it doesn't spoil by then), larvae will pupate in layers over one another and suffocate those that have pupated prior..
Wingless D. melanoter fruit fly culture (24oz container).
Wingless fruit flies are ideal feeder insects for small or young
animals. Unlike crickets or other typical feeder insects, fruit
flies cannot bite or harm your pet. They are incredibly easy to
maintain and reproduce quickly. Under ideal conditions and proper
maintenance, a single 24oz culture can produce a couple thousand
flies! Adult flies are great feeders for: Fish, baby Lizards,
small frogs, praying mantis nymphs, spiderlings, and many more!
Size: y adult fruit flies are typically just under 1/8 of
an inch long (refer to the last two photos of this listing) Life
cycle: Fruit flies undergo complete metamorphosis. They begin
life as eggs which, within 24 hours of being laid, will hatch
into larvae called maggots. Maggots feed on and live within the
media provided at the bottom of the container. They remain in the
media until ready to pupate. At this point, the larvae will crawl
to the sides of the container and on the wood shaving substrate
to pupate. They will remain in their pupal stage for about 5
days. Pupae will change from a light brown/ golden color to
transparent (you can see the fly inside!) When they are ready to
eclose (emerge as an adult from a pupae). Newly emerged adult
flies are sensitive and shouldn’t be handled for about an hour.
In a couple of days, they will be ready to mate and lay eggs.
Temperature/humidity: The life cycle progression of fruit flies,
like other insects, is dependent on the temperature at which they
are kept. While room temperature is ideal for maintaining flies,
they can tolerate colder temperatures. If necessary, they can be
refrigerated (NOT FROZEN) for about a week without inflicting any
harm to the flies at any stage of life. Refrigerating the flies
will cause them to be very sluggish or immobile until
temperatures warm up. As a result, temporary refrigeration can be
used to separate/transfer flies elsewhere. As long as there is
adequate air exchange, and the media is properly hydrated,
humidity isn’t a crucial factor. Media: The media provided is a
potato-based proprietary modification of a commercially available
type of fruit fly media. I supplement media with beetroot powder
as this provides extra ents, like carotenoids, which have
been shown to extend the lives of fruit flies as well as gives
your pets (who eat the flies) better tion. Media should
remain hydrated at all times. It should be smooth (like thick
mashed potatoes), but never runny or sticky. Otherwise, adult
flies will become trapped in the media and suffocate. If media is
too dry, cracks may appear. Media that is not properly hydrated
will delay the production of flies. To rehydrate, simply add
water (slowly and little by little) until media appears smooth.