male dubia deaths!

melly911

New member
it cant be old age........... they are all just new males i gave away the others and i bought them as mixed three months ago so they only can posibbly be three month old males
 

Elizabeth Freer

Well-known member
Are you keeping them something like this:
Feeding crickets and roaches
Feed crickets/roaches food that provides no more than 20% protein and no more than 5% crude fat. Some choices are:
Chicken Laying Mash (from feed store): The label reads 16-18% minimum protein and 3% minimum fat.
Fluker Farms High Calcium Cricket Feed
Dry oatmeal
Alfalfa hay (for the 3 wo and older crix)
Collard greens (especially recommended for the high calcium-to-low phosphorous ratio)
Carrots (natural source of beta carotene)

A 6 ounce glass Pyrex (or competing model) custard cup makes an excellent feeding dish for teeny to small roaches. Medium dubia will escape. Try containers with perpendicular sides. For leos, use a 1 inch high x 3 inch diameter stepping stone for ease of access to this dish as well as to stabilize it.

For more information feeding the feeders, go to Maurice Pudlo's sticky in the Geckos Unlimited Feeders, Food & Nutrition subforum: Feeder Insect Diets & Gutload

Cricket Care:
Acheta domesticus, the softer brown cricket, is highly recommended over Gryllus assimilis, the Jamaican field cricket. For crickets I place an "assortment" of the above-mentioned food on the bottom of an extra large Kritter Keeper or a plastic 56 quart Sterilite container, add the crickets, add two layers of egg flats, and top with a paper towel. Keep these crickets at room temperature. Spray the paper towel about every other day for moisture or more frequently if the room is hot. Using these methods it is easy to keep crickets alive for a month or so post purchase.

Roach Care
I breed Blaptica dubia in a ten gallon tank with 5 vertically positioned egg flats. The above-mentioned food can be kept in shallow lids to one side of the egg flats. For moisture I dampen a clean medium-size sponge and occasionally spray the flats. In a room which ranges from 67 F/19.5 C upwards, I keep a 40 watt bulb in a reflector dome directly over the screened tank and on 24/7.
 

SnowDragon

New member
That's what i use among other things. The plane dry oatmeal isn't there favorite but they do eat some, mine prefer wheat bran.
 

Ozymandias

New member
well off the top of my head i cant think of what would do that, manly because usually when people get die-off it happens in both male and females not just males. approximately how many males do you usually find dead in a week? also what do you feed them and what temp do you keep them at?
 

melly911

New member
honestly idk the temps but they are breeding so the temps should be fine plus they molt fine too i have them on a heat pad and im feeding them crushed beneful gog food
 

Ozymandias

New member
mmm well still no clue but it might be something in the Dog food, also if you are using the roaches as a feeder feeding them dog food can lead to health problems in your animals. even when i feed dog food to my non-feeder roaches i use a high quality dog food that is low on protein (no less 18%) and low on fat (no less than 5%). also baneful is known to contain food colorants and in general isn't the best dog food. here is a also a comparison of the dog food i use for my dogs and roaches (non-feeders) and Beneful.

Beneful

GUARANTEED ANALYSIS
Crude Protein (Min) 25.0%
Calcium (Ca) (Min) 1.1%
Crude Fat (Min) 10.0%
Iron (Fe) (Min) 175 mg/kg
Crude Fiber (Max) 4.0%
Selenium (Se) (Min) 0.2 mg/kg
Moisture (Max) 14.0%
Vitamin A (Min) 10,000 IU/kg
Linoleic Acid (Min) 1.5%
Vitamin E (Min) 100 IU/kg

CALORIE CONTENT
Metabolizable Energy (ME)
3434 kcal/kg
1561 kcal/lb
342 kcal/cup

INGREDIENTS
Ground yellow corn, chicken by-product meal, corn gluten meal, whole wheat flour, animal fat preserved with mixed-tocopherols (form of Vitamin E), rice flour, chicken, soy flour, water, propylene glycol, sugar, tricalcium phosphate, salt, phosphoric acid, animal digest, calcium phosphate, potassium chloride, sorbic acid (a preservative), dried carrots, dried tomatoes, avocado, calcium propionate (a preservative), choline chloride, L-Lysine monohydrochloride, added color (Yellow 5, Red, 40, Blue 2, Yellow 6), Vitamin E supplement, zinc sulfate, ferrous sulfate, manganese sulfate, niacin, Vitamin A supplement, calcium carbonate, copper sulfate, Vitamin B-12 supplement, calcium pantothenate, thiamine mononitrate, garlic oil, pyridoxine hydrochloride, riboflavin supplement, Vitamin D-3 supplement, menadione sodium bisulfite complex (source of Vitamin K activity), calcium iodate, folic acid, biotin, sodium selenite.
A-4095


Wellness Super5Mix® Just for Seniors

Guaranteed Analysis
Crude Protein - Not Less Than 18.0%
Crude Fat - Not Less Than 10.0%
Crude Fiber - Not More Than 5.0%
Moisture - Not More Than 11.0%
Calcium - Not Less Than 0.9%
Phosphorus - Not Less Than 0.75%
Vitamin E - Not Less Than 400 IU/kg
Omega 6 Fatty Acids* - Not Less Than 2.00%
Omega 3 Fatty Acids* - Not Less Than 0.40%
Glucosamine Hydrochloride* - Not Less Than 800 mg/kg
Chondroitin Sulfate* - Not Less Than 700 mg/kg
Beta-Carotene* - Not Less Than 5 mg/kg
Lycopene* - Not Less Than 0.25 mg/kg
Taurine* - Not Less Than 0.09%
Total Micro-organisms* - Not Less Than 20,000,000 CFU/lb

INGREDIENTS
Deboned Chicken, Oatmeal, Ground Barley, Rye Flour, Chicken Meal, Ground Brown Rice, Tomato Pomace, Whitefish, Rice Bran, Natural Chicken Flavor, Tomatoes, Ground Flaxseed, Ground Millet, Canola Oil (preserved with mixed tocopherols, a natural source of Vitamin E), Carrots, Spinach, Sweet Potatoes, Apples, Blueberries, Potassium Chloride, Vitamins [Beta-Carotene, Vitamin E Supplement, Ascorbic Acid (Vitamin C), Vitamin A Supplement, Niacin, d-Calcium Pantothenate, Riboflavin, Vitamin D-3 Supplement, Pyridoxine Hydrochloride, Thiamine Mononitrate, Folic Acid, Biotin, Vitamin B-12 Supplement], Minerals [Zinc Sulfate, Zinc Proteinate, Iron Proteinate, Ferrous Sulfate, Copper Proteinate, Copper Sulfate, Manganese Proteinate, Manganese Sulfate, Sodium Selenite], Choline Chloride, Calcium Carbonate, Dicalcium Phosphate, Glucosamine Hydrochloride, Chondroitin Sulfate, Mixed Tocopherols (a natural preservative), Taurine, Chicory Root Extract, Garlic Powder, Yucca Shidigera Extract, Green Tea Extract, Dried Lactobacillus plantarum, Enterococcus faecium, Lactobacillus casei, Lactobacillus acidophilus fermentation products, Rosemary Extract.

This is a naturally preserved product.

please note that i feed wellness to my dogs any way so i always have a ready source of it and i stress i only feed dog food to my non-feeder roaches, my feeder roaches get a home made gutload.
 
If you purchased them as mixed sized nymphs I would suspect they are as you say not old enough to die.

Diet can be a factor, so can heat and humidity, population density, access to food is another issue (they need easy and secure access to the food container).

Dubia will not eat if they do not have access to hydration, this will result in die-offs of males first then followed by females, males keep less reserves.

Food directly under/over a heat source will heat the food to a point where the roaches will not be able to eat it.

Very high fat foods will also cause rapid die-offs, fat content should be close to 3%, just 5% higher can result in greatly reduced lifespan and slower development.

Lack of B vitamins can result in stunted development or early death.

High calcium to phosphorous ratios contribute to nurological issues 2:1 is optimal with 2% elemental calcium by weight of the entire diet being close to the maximum levels tolerated in a breeding type diet.

100% plant based diets lack some amino acids, so a diet containing only grains and greens is often lacking, brewers yeast is a complete protein, though powdered milk can be used to replace that ingredient at the slight risk of additional fat content. Adding legumes to grains helps fill in the amino acid profile of an insect diet, proper balance is sometimes hard to nail down though.

While this is the food and nutrition section, I suspect your issue is not 100% diet related, dubia do well on plain old low fat dog food, so look closely at your other components of care. Something is not correct.

Maurice Pudlo
 

melly911

New member
it might be my heat but im not sure but i switched them to dog food and wheat flour ill see how it does it might be overpopulated too
 

Elizabeth Freer

Well-known member
it might be my heat but im not sure but i switched them to dog food and wheat flour ill see how it does it might be overpopulated too

Your UTH was my gut reaction to the problem...but my experience breeding Blaptica dubia is limited. I heat their 10 gallon tank with an overhead dome light resting on the tank's screen. Usually I have a 40 w incandescent bulb in the dome 24/7 within a room temperature bathroom.

I would not feed them any food source over 5% fat or 20% protein. I feed them the same diet that I feed my crickets.

What size is your dubia cage?
 
Top