Breeding crickets - light requirements advice

Nathanb

New member
Hi,
I'm thinking about trying to breed crickets - there's no way I'm going to try it in the house (my wife will divorce me!) so I'm aiming for the garage - only problem, there's no windows/natural light, it's well insulated so warmth isn't an issue - how much light do they need? Will I get away with a single T5 tube or similar over the breeding tank/area set on a timer for say 10 hours a day?

Thanks

Nathan
 

JessJohnson87

New member
I have never bred crickets but I would just get a simple heat bulb, like the incandescent reptile ones, and put that in a dome fixture to set on top of the container you choose to breed them in. I leave a light on 24/7 for my roaches so I would do the same for crickets, then you can always supplement a day/night cycle with the T5 tube.

http://www.geckosunlimited.com/comm...feeding-issues-/68574-cricket-guidelines.html <---check out this thread on cricket care/breeding.
 

Nathanb

New member
Thank Jess - to be honest if I can get away with a simple dome/light fitting hanging over the area that I'm going to try and breed them in that would be even easier.
Is there any reason you use a heat bulb? I have a couple of spare ceramic E27 fixtures so if possible I'll just get a LED bulb to go in them and rig them up over the area (means less electric cost and means I've not gotta buy any more fixtures) I don't have a T5 setup at the minute - I was going to buy one especially
 

JessJohnson87

New member
I use a 100 watt black light for my roaches because I already had that laying around and it's cheaper than setting them up with a heat pad and thermostat, they seem to be thriving with just that. Crickets need slightly cooler temperatures than what the dubia need, about 85* is what that care sheet said. You could either use a black light bulb or the moon light bulb for them, I would avoid the bright basking bulbs.
 

Nathanb

New member
Ahh ok - they're going to be in a large temperature controlled propagator that I've got spare from the garden, so keeping the temp up isn't a problem; its just the light. Would a standard house bulb not work?

I'm intrigued - if not, why not?
 

JessJohnson87

New member
It works, they heat up pretty well, I used a standard incandescent on my crested gecko tub when the temperatures were cooler than I liked. You can get a standard black party light and that would heat up just as good as a reptile one, when the 100 watt I have goes out, I was just going to replace it with one of those.
 

thepianoguy

New member
From what i had read, generally crickets like moist n cooler temp about 23 so that their life span is longer(n happier), but when the breeding season had came, they need a higher temp around 27 30, i think a CFL would work, 6500k would work,5 watts or 9!) i would recommend heater when breeding them! And be sure to keep the box moister! Hope this helps!
 

Zux

New member
Neither crickets or roaches need or want any sort of light to breed, in fact you may find breeding decreases markedly from the stress of being exposed to light. As-long as they have food, places to hide and warmth then you're better off keeping them in darkness as much as possible.
 
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