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No need really to separate beetles, pupae, larvae and eggs.How would one separate the eggs from the beetle? What is your best method? I'm hoping to not have to hand pick out every beetle, because there has to be a faster way.
So the window screen method does work? I read that it didn't work out... but maybe I'll try it.The advantage to separating the beetle eggs from the beetle tray is to keep them safe from being eaten. I cut a hole in the bottom of the beetle tray and glue a window screen (metal since the beetles chew on nylon screening) and I use rolled oats in that tray. I set the beetle tray onto a tray filled with wheat bran and the eggs filter down into that tray. The lid of the egg tray has been cut out so the beetle tray can rest safely on top of the egg tray.
Once those eggs hatch and I see the bran substrate alive and moving, I fill a fresh tray with bran and switch them out. It usually takes a month during warm weather for the eggs to hatch, while six weeks to two months during cooler months.
What size should window screen should I use? I know that there are many different sizes. Just a general small size for the window screen I guess? Is there a thread that shows your setup with your window screen method?The screen in the bottom of the beetle tray should work very well if you remember two things.
One is to make sure the screen material is metal. Beetles will chew holes in the nylon screen and then drop into the egg tray below. This has happened to me. No biggie except then you have to re-do the screening with nylon and catch the escaped beetles. Do it right in the first place and that will be the end of it.
The second is to make sure your beetle substrate is course enough not to sift through. This has also happened to me. I used wheat bran in the beginning, and wondered where all the substrate had disappeared. It had all fallen though to the egg tray. Use rolled oats. The beetles love them and they stay in the beetle tray except for the pieces the beetles have chewed up small enough to fall though.