This article has been written by my friend Kay the Guru from Japan. He published the article at a time when breeding Lucanidae in Europe was something really new for most breeders. That time, we did not know much about the right wood and many other things.Hence, it is not surprising that very often our breeding of Lucanidae failed. Kay helped me understand quite few things about Lucanidae breeding at that time, something that I am very grateful for.
1. Introduction
Prosopocoilus giraffa is the longest of all 1,400 living stag beetle species. My particular concerns are the breeding/rearing of giant stag beetles, the largest male imago of which exceeds 100 mm in length. As a reference, of all 1,400 living stag beetle species on earth, there are only 12 species that fall into this category (see the following list: Giant Stag Beetles).
Giant Stag Beetles:
1) Prosopocoilus giraffa (keisukei of Flores Is.: max. 123 mm?);
2) Hexarthrius mandibularis (sumatranus of Sumatra Is.: max. 118.5 mm);
3) Dorcus titanus (palawanicus of Palawan Is.: max. 111.3 mm);
4) Cyclommatus elaphus (Sumatra Is.: max. 109.0 mm);
5) Hexarthrius rhinoceros (chaudoiri of Sumatra Is.: max. 107.5 mm);
6) Odontolabis intermedia (Negros Is.: max. 107.0 mm);
7) Prosopocoilus confucius (Vietnam: max. 106.0 mm);
8) Odontolabis alces (Mindanao Is.: max. 104.3 mm);
9) Odontolabis burmeisteri (S. India: max. 104.0 mm);
10) Dorcus alcides (Sumatra Is.: max. 102.3 mm);
11) Lucanus cerves (judaicus: max. 100.2 mm); and
12) Cyclommatus metallifer (metallifer of Sulawesi Is.: max. 100.0 mm)
These pages present the breeding/rearing of Prosopocoilus giraffa keisukei. Discussion on the breeding/rearing follows natural history of the insect, which is thought useful for breeding/rearing. There are 9 varieties of the species Prosopocoilus giraffa (S. Nagai):
1) giraffa Oliver, 1789
(max. 108 mm; northeastern India, Nepal, Bhutan, Myammar, Thailand, Laos, Vietnam,
Cambodia and Malaysia);
2) borobudor Mizunuma et Nagai, 1991
(max. 99 mm; Sumatra, Java and Bali Is., Indonesia);
3) daisukei Mizunuma et Nagai, 1991
(max. 114 mm; Negros and Sibuyan Is., Philippines);
4) keisukei Mizumuna et Nagai, 1991
(max. 123 mm?; Flores, Lombok, and Sumbawa and Tanahjampea Is., Indonesia);
5) makitai Mizumuma et Nagai, 1991
(max. 104 mm; Mindoro and Luzon Is., Philippines);
6) nilgiriensis Mizumuma et Nagai, 1991
(max. 102 mm; southern India);
7) nishikawai Mizunuma et Nagai, 1991
(max. 104 mm; Tahuna Is., Indonesia);
8) nishiyamai Mizunuma et Nagai, 1991
(max. 107 mm; Sulawesi Is., Indonesia); and
9) timorensis Mizunuma et Nagai, 1991
(max. 97 mm; Timor and Wetar Is., Indonesia)
Ssp. keisukei is considered as the longest living stag beetle in the world. While a wild-caught male imago specimen of 123 mm is said to be possessed by either a German or Japanese collector, a number of sources say that 118.0 mm is the recorded maximum length of a wild-caught male imago of Flores Is., Indonesia. That means, for beetle breeding/rearing enthusiasts, that the male of this subspecies has a potential of growing up to 118.0 mm long or even longer. In the past few years some breeders in Japan, both dealers and hobbyists, have reported the rearing of males of this variety from eggs to imagoes of nearly the upper-limit range of 115-117 mm. The following discussion limits ssp. keisukei, first introducing its natural history and then emphasizing its breeding/rearing methods to win good results. However, this breeding/rearing method can be applied to many other Lucanidae.
2. Natural history
2.1 Description: Male 48.5-118.0 mm including mandibles; Female 35.5-58 mm. Elongate, somewhat flat. Dull black with blackish anntenae and legs. Male’s antler-like jaws have small teeth along inner edge and a pair of big teeth in the upper middle, and are slightly forked at end. Head of a large male reaches beyond the length of its prothorax and abdomen combined.
2.2 Habitat: Tropical rain forests.
2.3 Range: Ssp. keisukei is confined to Flores, Lombok, Sumbawa and Tanahjampea Is., Indonesia.
2.4 Food: Imago saps tree juice and larva feeds rotten hardwood tree.
2.5 Life cycle: The insect life cycle is said to be largely unknown in a natural setting. Under captive rearing (26 degrees C. in summer; 18 degrees C. in winter) of one generation, however, the author has experienced the following:
Upon the transfer of larvae singly into rearing bottles filled with substrate
1. Duration of larva:
Male: 9 or more months (L1: 1 month; L2: 1month; and L3: 7 or more months); and
Female: 4-9 months (L1: 1 month; L2: 1 month; and L3: 2-7 months)
2. alias of pupa: 1 month
Note that the duration of egg is said to be about 1 month.
3. Breeding/rearing
3.1 Getting started
To begin with, what you need are:
1) A pair of imagoes (or several larvae);
2) Containers for breeding/rearing;
3) Food for imagoes;
4) Substrate for breeding; and
5) Decaying wood logs (length: about 15 cm; diameter: about 10 cm)
1) If you live in a country where this beetle is sold, please obtain a pair of imagoes (or several larvae). In choosing which individuals to buy, the following criteria are useful:
a) Wild-caught individuals:
Make sure: – When were they collected?: Avoid older individuals.
– Are they healthy-looking?: Check if there is no scar, injury
or missing part.
b) Captive reared individuals:
Make sure: – When did they emerge?: Avoid individuals of 8 months or older.
– Are they healthy-looking?: Check if there is no scar, injury
or missing part.
* Note that these two criteria are for imagoes. For choosing larvae, you can skip steps: – When
were they collected? and – When did they emerge?
2) Oviposition (egg-laying) requires some space; e.g. a container with a capacity of at least 5-6 liters (a lid is a must to stop the beetles from escaping). Get one and fill it with substrate (Also, see 4. A substrate for rearing Lucanid beetles).
– Put substrate into the container up to 5 cm high from the bottom, and press it hard by hand or any other means. Next, place one or two decaying wood logs on the top. Then, another layer of substrate should be added softly up to the point where the log(s) is/are almost covered. Female dugs a hole into the log and lays eggs in it.
– Then, let a mated female alone into the container. A male is vicious and may hurt a female in a stressful environment. A hand pairing would be good for mating. Feed them regularly (for food, see 3)).
– Keep temperature at 20-26 degrees C. and moisten the substrate and log to the extent which they are slightly wet.
3) For maintaining imagoes, you need to feed them with a pealed banana. It is better to place its pieces or slices on a small tray instead of applying them directly on the substrate, which causes them spoiling faster or prompts an occurrence of fruit flies or ticks. A pealed apple or a peach also serves as a suitable food.
4) See 4. A substrate for rearing Lucanid beetles. A substitute can be gardening black dirt. But it serves for a breeding purpose only, not for rearing by any means.
5) Find a fallen decaying wood in your area. A hardwood tree only. Preferably, Fagus sp. or Quercus sp. Cut it into pieces of about 15 cm in length. Then, keep them under fresh water for a day. This moistens the log and kills beetle’s predator organisms in it.
3.2 Rearing larvae
After a couple of months, take the female out of the container*. Then, carefully break down the log(s) to see if larvae have already hatched inside. If so, transfer them singly into plastic/glass bottles of an about 800 cc capacity, which is filled with substrate (see 4. A substrate for rearing Lucanid beetles). When you stuff substrate into empty bottles, the substrate should be pressed hard. Some female larvae may undergo emergence in the first bottles without changing substrates. Meanwhile, male larvae have a greater appetite and take longer time before their emergence. When the substrate in the first bottles is almost eaten up, you need to transfer them singly into the second bottles. For females, use a bottle of the same dimensions, but for males, you need to transfer them to a larger bottle (e.g. 1,500 cc with at least 15 cm diameter). Repeat this process, if need be.
* If you wish to obtain more eggs, let the female into another breeding container.
Repeat this process if you want.
When changing substrates, it is safer to stuff unused (new) substrate first from the bottom of the bottle, and then used one. The capacity ratio of the new to the used is 2-to-1. By so doing, beetle’s symbiotic bacteria, if any, would grow steadily in the substrate and enhance an ideal feeding environment for better larval growth (H. Kojima).From the author’s rearing, the duration of larvae are: Male: 9 or more months; and Female: 4-7 months.
3.3 Larva sexing
For sexing, see the following picture, Figure 3.3.
3.4 Maintaining pupae
After larvae turn noticeably yellowish in colour, stop changing substrates. Some time soon, the larvae undergo pupation. Often times, you see pupae through the (transparent) bottle wall against which their pupal cells are made. The best advice I give you at this point is patience: wait until one month after their emergence, and then take them out carefully. Newly emerged imagoes need 3-4 months for maturity. The life span of the imago is 10-12 months after its emergence.
3.5 Breeding
Repeat the process: 3.1 Getting started.
4. A substrate for rearing Lucanid beetles
If you live in a place where you can get enough natural food for the species that you want to breed/rear, please skip this chapter. The natural food would be the best choice.
If not, on this page, I will tell you a recipe of a substrate for rearing Lucanid beetle larvae, which was originated by H. Kojima, a Japan’s leading expert on the breeding/rearing of Lucanid/Dynastine beetles.
To begin with, what you need are:
1) Decaying wood mulch (preferably Fagus sp. or Quercus sp.; no coniferous trees);
2) Wheat flour;
3) Natural water (avoid tap water, if possible); and
4) Active dry yeast (2 teaspoons / 5 liters of mulch)
* Capacity ratio of each, 1), 2) and 3), respectively: 10 to 1 to 1 (unit: liter)
The capacity ratio varies among the users of this substrate.
Procedures:
STEP 1: Make mulch completely dry under direct sun or by any other means.
STEP 2: Mix the mulch with wheat flour. Then, pour water into them and stir them well.
STEP 3: Put some yeast and stir well.
STEP 4: Keep it at 25 or more degrees C. This makes the substrate well fermented.
STEP 5: Stir it at least once a day until its temperature returns normal. It may take one month.
* Wheat flour is nutrition and also acts as an agent to prompt fermentation which is
beneficial to larvae. And when fermentation begins, the substrate temperature rises.
To make wood into mulch, some hobbyists use a home juicer/mixer. Please be aware that you must make the right choice of wood. This is important. If you are unsure of it, you can ask someone who knows it.
5. Acknowledgement
My special thanks are indebted to the following organizations and individuals: ‘The Beetle Ring’ (http://www.naturalworlds.org/beetlering/beetle_sites.htm) by Cameron Campbell, Administrator of ‘The Natural Worlds’ (http://www.naturalworlds.org/); ‘The Kanagawa Stag Beetle Club,’ a local chapter of Japan’s largest beetle hobbyist club, ‘The Stag Beetle Fools’ (http://www.mars.dti.ne.jp/~k-sugano/bakamono_web/index2e.html), and its members including Hiroshi Kojima; Benjamin Harink for sharing this wonderful hobby together and allowing me to contribute this article to his great beetle website; my father who has inspired me to pursue this interest; and my mother who has been patient enough for this unusual hobby of mine.
Contact:
I can be reached at http://www.geocities.com/kaytheguru/. Please feel free to visit my beetle website.
PS : The following pictures are a male and a female Prosopocoilus giraffa keisukei imago captive reared by the author.
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