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ITT we chit chat about insects/arachnids/pets with 6 legs or more
I started a thread similar to this one about a year ago, but it was about exotic pets. This one is about insects and arachnids or any pet you've had with 6 legs or more. When I was a kid, I had a few ant farms, and then when I was in highschool, I had a few Madagascar hissing cockroaches. Right now, I have an emperor scorpion, and a tarantula. So, here we chit chat about pet insects/arachnids and the like.:)
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I've had a tarantula...I want another one as well as an emperor scorpion, but I have to wait until I don't have a roommate. I haven't had one yet that would be ok with either of those pets (plus my landlord doesn't allow them...I just bet I could get away with it if my roomie would let me). My current one has a serious spider phobia and she informed me she'd never been near a scorpion but thinks she won't feel any differently about those and I'm not heartless enough to make her live with what is to her a gigantic panic attack.
I'd like another Chilean Rosehair like I had as a kid...they aren't the prettiest, but they're friendly enough and are such easy keepers (just crickets is fine). Maybe a Mexican Redknee tarantula since it's about the same as far as an easy keeper. Maybe an African Giant Millipede just because they're so cool and no one I live with can possibly be scared of a Millipede (right?). |
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http://www.augintinis.lt/forumas/ima...0tarantula.jpg |
I've never had an invertebrate as a pet, but one of my areas of expertise is entomology. I'm partial to honeybees. I want to be a beekeeper and have my own hives. :)
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I have a minor in field biology, and ornithology, entomology and herpetology were my passions and I focused in those 3. Ornith is more of a hobby, herp is a passion, but I've been a bug girl all my life. Started in 4-H when I was a kid. I've been collecting and mounting insects for display since I was about 8.
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lol, CG, biology/pre-vet was my major when I first started college. I couldn't hack the chemistry classes though (organic is the bane of my existence), and I had a tendancy to pass out when observing surgeries. I have a scar in my right eyebrow that reminds me of the last time I passed out. 8 stitches convinced me I was not meant to be a vet. Environmental scientist/field biologist is a good back up though.
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Oh and parasitology was one of my profs concentration. It was ok for me. I really preferred the insects though. I had to have a 100 species collection for my ento class, and I think I was the only one who ended up with an A because I had species from all of the 12 required Orders, where most others only had 10 or 11. It was tough too, everything had to fit in a 12"x16" box. Then for the other classes I needed an insect collection (invert zoo and natural history), I was the schmuck who was collecting bugs for everyone in the damn class, lol.
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I think you have really awesome interests and a cool collection. Thanks for sharing.:) |
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I love the name Thelma.:p Quote:
Yep, I love parasites, not just the internal microscopic parasites, but insects, too. Like, a lot of bugs are social parasites of ants that aren't ants themselves. I know some butterflies, for example can trick ants into raising their caterpillars. They lay their eggs on flowers, and when the caterpillars hatch, they drop to the ground where ants come across them. Normally, ants look at a caterpillar as food, but if they come across a social parasite, they kind of act as if the caterpillar is a lost larva from it's own colony. It's really interesting because, the ants are deceived by the caterpillars ordors, so then they take it back to their nest, where they feed it, and groom it the same way they would any of their own larvae. Crazy thing is, sometimes the ants even prefer the parasite to their own young. |
We are doing a prairie burn at a site this spring. I've convinced the project manager to let me go through the field in the days before hand and clear out the box turtles. Other animals have no problem escaping, but there is a large box turtle population in the area, and I'll feel terrible if the fire kills too many.
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lol, last summer, my daughter and I watched a parasitic wasp lay her eggs in a caterpillar. I felt bad for it at first, but it was fascinating!
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