Interview with Smug Bug!

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  • Опубликовано: 29 янв 2025

Комментарии • 17

  • @PotooBurd
    @PotooBurd 10 месяцев назад +1

    I enjoy this so much! Amazing content, best wishes to you and your future projects! 🌻

  • @snaileontologist
    @snaileontologist 3 года назад +3

    Great video! Thanks for the information about isopods playing dead, I was worried about that and its good to know its normal.

  • @joshuarosenblatt
    @joshuarosenblatt 10 месяцев назад +1

    This was awesome!!

  • @Mushroom_FernFox
    @Mushroom_FernFox 3 года назад +7

    I know that this stream is a bit old but I figured I should comment anyway. Do you know what state Smug Bug is in? Considering buying some new isopods soon. :)

    • @Aquarimax
      @Aquarimax  3 года назад +2

      I believe Smug Bug is based in South Dakota. 😊

    • @Mushroom_FernFox
      @Mushroom_FernFox 3 года назад +3

      @@Aquarimax Thank you! Love your channel by the way. Happy keeping 🙂

  • @PureAndShrimple
    @PureAndShrimple 5 месяцев назад +1

    What a lovely lady! I enjoyed that

    • @Aquarimax
      @Aquarimax  5 месяцев назад

      @@PureAndShrimple as did I! She has a lot
      of great insights!

    • @PureAndShrimple
      @PureAndShrimple 5 месяцев назад

      @@Aquarimax no RUclips channel? I found her on Instagram

  • @stephenbird5641
    @stephenbird5641 2 года назад +1

    Watching again on June 4 2022.
    Still amazing and interesting !

  • @PitsFam
    @PitsFam 2 года назад +4

    I’m just watching this and have a question if it’s not too late? When did you isolate the papayas? And if they produce the wild color, do you take it out? Or is that impossible.

    • @Aquarimax
      @Aquarimax  2 года назад +3

      I don’t know if Laura will see this…I am not sure when she isolated Cubaris murina Papaya, but I can say that once a strain is fully isolated, producing wild types is unlikely, but possible ( it requires a mutation that reverses the mutation that caused the color variation). Incompletely isolated strains will throw wild types frequently, however. When I first got Armadillidium nasatum‘whiteout’, they were not fully isolated. Over time, I removed the wild types, and now I don’t see wild types much, if at all.

  • @jorgecanales798
    @jorgecanales798 3 года назад +4

    In my area, vulgare isopods are breeding. I've seen pregnant females whenever I go isopod looking

  • @swayback7375
    @swayback7375 Год назад +1

    I’ve got gobs of multi colored A. Nasatum. All originally wild caught and I keep catching more variants.
    There are babies so we will see what comes

    • @swayback7375
      @swayback7375 Год назад

      I need help learning how to tell one species from another… I have a bin of wild caught that I pulled out of woodlands, I got quite excited, they look like calico scaber, or toned down lava, very variable individuals. But I collected them early on in my isopod journey… and I ended up with several kinds in that bin, I think I was unable to recognize differences between them, or I may have just gotten over eager and collected a group that had babies in it, or I was just sloppy and tossed everything in together 🤷🏾
      Whatever the case there’s 3 or 4 (or more) types in this same bin and so far, the longer I leave it alone the more different ones pop up.
      I’ve just started pull off any individuals that look alike and putting each type in a new bin. Which is All well and good except the whole “where will I put them!?!” question comes up… I haven’t bought a single isopod and have more than 10 different types and like 15 different bins… several are just mixed on purpose but the rest are meant to be isolated

  • @Mae-nr7wr
    @Mae-nr7wr 3 года назад +3

    smug bug!

  • @Jacob42086
    @Jacob42086 3 года назад

    Reeeeex