Pearl Fields
Avid Member
I’m in Washington, Dubias are allowed, but if I was ever to breed a roach for my chameleon, do discoids have any nutritional advantages??? And if there are any roaches even better than those, any suggestions?
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Ok thanks. But are they basically the same nutritionally? And if he will eat dubia, will he most likely be ok with discoids??Yes, discoid because they are more active.
Thanks!! This was exactly what I was looking for!! ??
Ok. Thanks! If I ever breed them though, discoids are probably the one I would choose, as my chameleon seems to not be picky, but just needs the feeders to be pretty active. He’s eaten crickets Dubias supers wax worms BSFL BSFL pupae and BSF alreadyNutrition comes from gut loading, not the species of roach.
CHEERS!
Nick
Just my opinion—it shouldn't be.Thanks!! This was exactly what I was looking for!! ??
Ok. This actually makes sense.2. I'm really hesitant to accept an analysis from a source that's selling what they're pushing, especially when they charge considerably more (70%* more) for discoids than for dubias. Are discoids really that much more difficult to breed? IDK.
Pretty sure I can’t have lobster roaches. Can they climb smooth surfaces??Lobster roaches are more active and will climb.
I didn’t realize they were selling roaches. Just skimmed it until I saw that it did a comparison. Sorry.Just my opinion—it shouldn't be.
1. The link offered no statistical A-B comparisons; "slight advantage" could be statistically insignificant.
2. I'm really hesitant to accept an analysis from a source that's selling what they're pushing, especially when they charge considerably more (70%* more) for discoids than for dubias. Are discoids really that much more difficult to breed? IDK.
I think a better comparison should be from a source with no financial incentive.
This comes from Reptifiles.com
View attachment 275114
This shows that the two aren't that much different, and IMO, not enough to warrant the difference in price. YMMV.
Nutritional data for dubia roaches can be found all over the place; finding data for discoids is proving a bit more difficult—probably (guess) because dubias have been around longer (as commercial feeders) and more studied.
If the prices were similar—or even close—I might switch too, but 70%* seems exorbitant. YMMV.
*Their price for 200 med dubias vs. 200 med discoids.
No big whoop.I didn’t realize they were selling roaches. Just skimmed it until I saw that it did a comparison. Sorry.