Insect treat
Musca Domestica
A Premium Quality Feeder Insect
Musca domestica is one of the most widely distributed organisms on earth and occupies a basic position in the food chain. In every stage of its life cycle, it is a beneficial food source for many types of animals. It is consumed with hearty enthusiasm by Rothschild's Pheasants straight from the jungle, penny-sized frogs, aquarium and pond fish, as well as most captive-bred birds.
Birds are brought into peak breeding condition by eating the food that is best suited for rearing their young. Supplying breeding birds with enough of these necessary foods has a positive effect beyond just the nutritional. It promotes a higher breeding success and healthier babies.
Organic Vegetable Diet Lady G's Insect Treat contains 100% INSECTS. It is organic, natural and without additives. It provides additional, natural avian protein nutrition, needed especially by breeding birds rearing young. Our Musca domestica are raised on an exclusively organic vegetable diet. Just as live feeder mealworms and crickets, these insects are safe for avian consumption. Only insects that have been grown on vegetable diets are safe be fed to birds!
Every developmental stage of the Musca domestica are contained in Insect Treat, including the valuable larvae (maggot) and the pupae (cocoon). Important proteins (18.5%) reside in live larvae and lipids. During metamorphosis, amazing chemical changes take place. From larvae to pupae the Vitamin A content increases five and a half times, Vitamin C, 12 times.
Calcium to Phosphorus best for Birds Second only to the cricket, Musca Domestica (common housefly) provides the best calcium/phosphorus ratio. A Calcium to Phosphorus ratio of 1:1 was found to be the best for birds.
In the Common Feeder Insects the Calcium to Phosphorus:
Cricket - 1:2
Meal Worm - 1:13.5
Housefly - 1:3.4
For dehydration, the insects are heated in a low chamber so the moisture is rapidly removed and the nutrients kept in the best condition. Our preserved insects are UV reflective and retain the look of food to the bird's eye.
The housefly in its several forms will not fill every nitch in live feeder insect use, but it will fill many better than anything else available on the market so far.
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