It's really wierd...I sort through my bins almost daily--completely moving every bit to look for deads and pupae. Do you guys REALIZE that half the attraction on these was the 'feed it and leave it' aspect? And now I can't leave them alone!
Sheeze!
200 actually isn't that many, although I didn't think I had as many as I did in my pupae patch. I caught a couple of the beetles munching on pupae, so decided to move them out to their own digs, and thought as long as I was moving them, I might as well count 'em as I went.
Just about 200 and more on the way.
As the pupae develop, you can see the eye spots slowly show up dark, then the legs, then the wing cases. The top of the 'head' part (actually their middle section or 'shoulders' turns a nice toasty brown and then you wake up to this odd thing with a pale beige body and nut-brown head end. Oh, and legs. Six of those.
So keep an eye on your pupa. If he's dead, he'll turn a mucky brown and dry up or go black.
I don't hesitate to handle the pupae much--I sift through for beetles I can't readily see every couple of days. Gently, of course, just running my fingers through the pupae and thin layer of substrate they're on/in.
Patience!
(yeah yeah patience. How long does that take?
)