Izzy Bickford wrote:I'm getting geared up for some chickens and would like to raise BSF larvae from veggies scraps plus entrails of slaughtered animals, which I am currently just burying in zone 4/5. My concern is whether there are wild populations of BSF to lay eggs for me. I'm in south-central Washington state - Benton County. USDA plant hardiness zone 7a. Relative humidity 5-20 in the summer. Anyone found BSF in a similar climate?
I did some trekking at the poluse falls( still in desert region) park and it seems like we get the green soldier fly which favors marsh lands or streams for laying their eggs in while the pupa depends on things like algae and the adults depend on the nectar of short throat wild flowers, I would like to assume that there are some in your area or in a small sanctuary for them that has not been killed off because of herbicides of insecticides.
a way to attract other varieties of soldier fly that are similar to the bsf would be to introduce wild flowers like catnip or desert yarrow so that the adults keep coming back for nectar and can find the food scraps for their larva to live off of, so your gonna have to be inventive if you want to attract these flies.