Okay....I'm feeling even WORSE now than before. The Mantis is still alive...2 nights and 2 days later. As I left this morning to head out for my tour, I looked. He wasn't moving and on his back. I blow some air his direction. His leg began to move slowly. He's not moving as often or as fast, but he IS still moving. How sad.
I feel HORRIBLE that I've let him suffer for over 2 nights now. I have no idea why he's hanging on so long.
My sister's boyfriend called last night and told me to squish him with a brick. I said, "I'm not gonna squish him....he'll make a mess."
He said, just squish him in the head. I said no.
I called Mom this afternoon. She said she would have scooped him up and put him under a bush to die out of sight.
I told her I thought instead of squishing him with a brick, I could just take some scissors and decapitate him with one, quick, snip. She said no.
And now, after doing some research on Mantids, I see, they can still do things when they have no head.
For example, look at this video of a female eating the male. Halfway thru, they show another female finishing up the head
(which is already OFF the body) and the male is STILL copulating.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KYp_X...layer_embedded
So that leads me to believe, that beheading won't necessarily stop his misery.
Just add to it.
I've uploaded some pictures and they aren't the best.
I'm wondering if he's been stung by a wasp too because he had a stinger in the bottom part of his abdomen unless, that was part of his OWN body. I don't recall if it was there the first time I saw him or not.
These pictures are from day 1 when I first realized I hurt his leg. He was by my African Violets I had outside and that makes sense
according to this article on:
http://insected.arizona.edu/mantidinfo.htm
Where to find:
Praying mantids and /or their egg cases are very difficult to locate by just looking at plants because of their camouflage.
To find adults, look on flowering plants and at porch lights in August through late September.
Adult males will often fly to porch lights in the late fall. Home vegetable and flower gardens that are organic or where no insecticides have been used may be a good place to look.
Ta daaaaaaaaaa! That's exactly where he was. (Flowering plant, porch, Sept....unfortunately, insecticides had been used that morning and professional stuff 2 days prior.)
According to this article on prayingmantis.org:
An interesting praying mantis fact is that they are often the prey of large frogs, monkeys, larger birds, bats and snakes.
Similar sized spiders and giant hornets are also natural enemies.
Even though its not similar sized, this spider MIGHT be one of it's enemies.
One where I first noticed the spider watching him:
Poor thing is Male I've decided since his abdomen is small. Also, his UNDERSIDE is bright ORANGE even though he's not near anything orange. You can see the top wings are brown and his under wings are bright green...but the abdomen is orange. Weird. Pretty, but weird. I should note, it wasn't bright orange the first night I saw him.
Has anyone ever seen an orange "tummy" on these insects or is his orange because he's dying or infected with pesticide or spider venom?
Also on that prayingmantis.org site under fascinating facts are these 3 things:
* In Turkish and Arab cultures, the praying mantis is considered to be pointing to their religious center, Mecca.
* In French culture, the praying mantis can supposedly guide a lost child home.
* In China, roasted praying mantis eggs were eaten to treat bedwetting!
I'm also guessing he's a EUROPEAN MANTIS as compared to the CHINESE one. Coloration looks more European.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/European_mantis
Man you can learn a lot by researching, eh? Like look at the Mantis eating a HUMMINGBIRD:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dDxwN...layer_embedded
According to the Wikipedia page for Mantis:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mantis#...d_life_history
There is a long-standing American urban legend that killing a praying mantis is illegal and subject to a fine.
If that is/was true. I'm glad I didn't kill it.
But I still feel horrible about leaving it behind for 2 weeks now and not knowing which day it will actually die
and how many more days & nights of misery it will have while I'm gone.