On December 13th, I found that the ootheca had hatched! According to the person who sent me this ooth, it was laid circa 8/17/25, so incubation took roughly four months, not too shabby! About a dozen nymphs were wandering the incubation cup, and there were around 8 nymphs just chilling inside of the ootheca itself, two of which were dessicated and dead, as if they'd hatched and been stuck in there for days.
Interestingly there were not remnants of eggshells or any of the usual membranes that separate the eggs from each other within an oothecae, which leads me to believe they either consumed everything inside their ooth before exiting, or that there are none of those membranes in oothecae of this species to begin with.
I moved them to a well ventilated half gallon container with a substrate of coco fiber, topped with vertically slanted bark hides, leaf litter and fake fern fronds. They seem to prefer the artificial foliage to any of the other available hides, and spend much of their time in the fake foliage and around the rim of their enclosure, just under the lid. I lost a few nymphs while figuring out their preferred humidity requirements, which seem to be very high air humidity, but low surface moisture, and decent ventilation. They are reminiscent of Pseudoglomeris magnifica nymphs in that preference, and in overall morphology.
I have been offering fresh fruits, artificial pollen, and fish food pellets as their staple diet, and have definitely seen them nibbling the fruits and pollen. They seem to have very small appetites, and they did not plump up much at all before molting to L2.
They started molting to L2 around January 3rd, so about three weeks spent in L1, which is pretty lengthy. The coloration changed drastically from L1 to L2, and their movement, which was pretty clunky and awkward in L1, seems to have become much more smooth and calculated.
| L1 |
| L2 |
As far as I know, this is the first time this species has been successfully hatched in culture. And I am only the second person to hatch Rochaina in the US, period. Here's hoping I can be the first person in the world to raise captive hatched nymphs of this genus to adulthood! 😅
This is an iconic species, one I've wanted for many years. I remember when I was just a kid, freshly diagnosed with type 1 diabetes, bedridden in the hospital recovering from severe pancreatitis and ketoacidosis. To lift my spirits, my mom had gotten me the "Allpet Roaches" booklet by Orin McMonigle, the only real literature at that time dedicated specifically to culturing cockroaches, as a gift for me. And right on the cover was a picture of a wild adult of this species (mislabeled then as Paratropes lycoides). At the time it was a dream species, something that had never entered culture and had no guarantee of ever entering the hobby, but I've dreamt of keeping them ever since. And now, to come full circle and actually have this species in my possession, to be the first to hatch an ootheca of this species, and to attempt to be the first to raise nymphs to adulthood? Truly an unbelievable experience, and a testament to how far the hobby has come as a whole. 😄
Even if I ultimately fail to establish this species, working with them has definitely been the highlight of my 2025 hobby experience, and one of the highlights of my entire time in this hobby for sure.
And with that, I'll see y'all next time! 😉



























