


Also bonus, I accidentally bred a moth. I might put that in the tank too for food since it's snowing outside and idk what to do with it.


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I do not recommend putting a moth in the tank. A moth somehow gotten in my tank once and died in the water bowls. The crabs were very lethargic, and I didn't know why until I found a dead moth.ErikRasmussen wrote:![]()
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I win! Lol I hadn't seen babies at all yet and was ready to give up since i had a few die offs but now there is a 5 square inch area filled with babies isopods. Since I have such a small breeding container I am going to stick some in the tank so they don't get over crowded.
Also bonus, I accidentally bred a moth. I might put that in the tank too for food since it's snowing outside and idk what to do with it.
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It may not have been related to the dead moth.... correlation doesn't always equate to causation, and its easy to get swept up making assumptions about what we think we're witnessing. It's possible that the water became tainted & affected the crabs, but as someone who routinely finds dead woodlice in my pools, and doesn't have lethargic crabs (except when I do, because crabs have naturally varying activity/energy levels linked to their moulting cycle), I lean towards thinking a moth probably wasn't to blame.AwesomeHermit wrote: I do not recommend putting a moth in the tank. A moth somehow gotten in my tank once and died in the water bowls. The crabs were very lethargic, and I didn't know why until I found a dead moth.
Edit: Whoops.