A
Anonymous
Guest
A cool dude @ RC sent me a mantis he acquired in a shipment of TBS live rock. Shipping was hard on the guy, but he is still alive! (he was double bagged with air, insulated by newspaper, boxed and then sent overnight air).
....
When I opened the box, he wasn't looking so hot (beautiful specimen, though!), he was sluggish and laying on his back. The mantis was wedged into a fold of the plastic bag, but he was underwater at least. I checkd him out and he was still kicking, barely!
Over my lunch break I sped home and got him acclimating. A friend of mine is over at my place using my computer to hunt for jobs, so I have instructed him how to gently acclimate the mantis for me while I'm at work - I started the bag floating and wrote down careful instructions for a gentle acclimation.
I think the main problem is just that the water in his bag was depleted of oxygen. He perked up a little when I started him acclimating and swirled a little fresh water in there (I added about a cup, that's a lot more than I like to do, but I decided that he really needed some fresh water with oxygen in it).
....
When I opened the box, he wasn't looking so hot (beautiful specimen, though!), he was sluggish and laying on his back. The mantis was wedged into a fold of the plastic bag, but he was underwater at least. I checkd him out and he was still kicking, barely!
Over my lunch break I sped home and got him acclimating. A friend of mine is over at my place using my computer to hunt for jobs, so I have instructed him how to gently acclimate the mantis for me while I'm at work - I started the bag floating and wrote down careful instructions for a gentle acclimation.
I think the main problem is just that the water in his bag was depleted of oxygen. He perked up a little when I started him acclimating and swirled a little fresh water in there (I added about a cup, that's a lot more than I like to do, but I decided that he really needed some fresh water with oxygen in it).