- Joined
- Jun 28, 2004
- Messages
- 1,565
Of course, male want but female has a headache
Cheers,
Eric
Cheers,
Eric
fusion121 said:Playing god Eric, naughty naughty
Yes villosus would be the best bet since it is the most closely related to transvaalicus, so the chance of pheremones etc. being compatible would be higher.Androctonus_bic said:Try it with villosus, not with leisoma. Maybe run...
( nice funny tread )
According to the Parabuthus revision of Prendini, villosus seems to be the most closely related to transvaalicus, but Prendini said me some times ago that "P.villosus and P.transvaalicus are not closely related as they might at first appear". So... :?fusion121 said:Yes villosus would be the best bet since it is the most closely related to transvaalicus, so the chance of pheremones etc. being compatible would be higher.
Edit: then you could have Parabutus villovaalicus
Fergrim said:Doesn't diurnal mean active in the day time?
Hi Chad,redhourglass said:Interesting that male P. leiosma would respond to the pheromones of P. transvaalicus
Yes it is also written in the Leeming's book that "it is active during the day and is often seen wandering about in the early morning and late afternoon". Strange behaviour...redhourglass said:Interesting fact [off-topic] about Parabuthus villosus as provided in the Prendini's 2004 revision of the genus is that this species is diurnal (rocky habitats).