NO!
It is impossible to say how many individual stick insects are in the world - but there could easily be many millions. As for species, there are at least 3,000 different species of stick insect that are known, but there could easily be more that haven't been discovered yet.
Stick them in the same cage over night
I have a parakeet . The answer is NO!!! It will over heat them or scare them half to death.
There are over 3,000 recorded species of stick insect, 300 of which are bred in captivity. There is no such thing as a stick insect breed like a cat or a dog.
Different types of stick insects can be found all over the world. This includes the United States, New Zealand, and Borneo.
Yes, the giant stick population has changed over the years. Stick insects number among the members of the Phasmatidae family of insects. Giant stick insects, such as those of Ctenomorphaand Extatosoma genera, occupy niches in the Southern Hemisphere's continent and country of Australia (and of the Commonwealth's islands) that are threatened by agro-industrial development, globally warmed climate change and pet trade-inspired poaching.
Stick Insects come from all over the world, for example: Madagascar, New guinea, Peru, New Zealand, Australia, South America and many other countries. Stick insects mostly live in tropical and subtropical forests.
I have a hermit crab and he requires to have a humid cage. He is in a tank so i put 4 plastic place mats over the top. And I dabbed the sides of the tank with water and put a lamp over it. It got humid in about 10 minutes. So basically you need: Plastic place mats water a towel (to dab the water with) a lamp Hope this helps!
I usaually stick them in the same cage over night to make it faster!
Most captive Indian stick insects can and do reproduce in the absence of a male (parthenogenetic reproduction). The insect (female) will lay hundreds of tiny (0.08 inch or 2 mm) eggs over her life. These are smooth and round and must be separated form the feces at the bottom of the cage. Populations of stick insects which still live in the wild in India where the males are much more common breed in a conventional fashion. Here the mail fertilities the eggs and they and while the females can reproduce parthenogeneticaly, there are probably good genetic reasons for this since without normal sexual reproduction the species would be expected to lose genetic diversity over time and therefore be unable to adapt and evolve.
you should probably get a cage that doesn't have big gaps and that locks tight and don't stick it hi up and close to an edge because the cat and or cats could knock it over
There are many different types of stick insects which live in many different countries. The most common places to find them are in India, Africa and Australia. However they are kept as pets all over the world.