CATDOLL : CATDOLL: How can you prevent maggots from crawling out of the bucket when raising them in the bucket?

CATDOLL: How can you prevent maggots from crawling out of the bucket when raising them in the bucket?

1. How can you prevent maggots from crawling out of the bucket when raising them in the bucket?

No, I just need to take out the garbage more often in the future, especially in the hot summer when kitchen garbage or food can easily rot and cause insects to breed.

2. How to breed maggots?

Hanging carrion to attract maggots, then feeding them with fermented manure

3. What to breed fly maggots

The best way to breed fly maggots is to ferment poultry manure! It can also be fermented from other animal manure, platycodon, etc. Seedlings can be purchased or you can collect adult fly eggs yourself. The breeding cycle of fly maggots is very short, about 21 days! At present, the bred fly maggots are basically consumed by themselves... as feed for breeding other animals! Because of its low cost, short cycle, simple breeding technology, and effective use of waste, many people are breeding. Let me tell you a website for learning and exchanging breeding technology (special breeding tribe)

4. How to build a house for automatic separation of fly maggots?

There is no automatic breeding separation room. If you want to make money through this, you must not be afraid of dirt. Although the yield of outdoor breeding of fly maggots is lower than that of three-dimensional breeding of fly maggots, and it is not as stable as three-dimensional breeding of fly maggots, it has the advantages of low investment, quick results, no need to introduce species, no need to feed flies, and low cost. It is the choice of most breeders at present. The suitable season for outdoor simple fly maggot breeding is generally from the end of April to mid-October each year. The construction site of the simple breeding house is chosen away from the living area, with shade but certain light, and a large number of wild flies. The area should be determined according to the required output. According to production experience, the average output per square meter is about 0.5 kg. As long as the breeding house can shelter from rain, it can be a thatched house, a cement tile house, or a bark house. The house should be surrounded by a 1-meter-high screen to prevent animals such as chickens and ducks from entering. The breeding pool requires a simple cement pool, each pool area is 1.5 square meters to 2 square meters, and the pool edge is 20 cm high. Preparation and placement of manure: 70% fresh pig manure (within 3 days of excretion by pigs), 30% chicken manure (within one week); 100% fresh pig manure from slaughterhouse; 75% pig manure, 25% tofu dregs; 50% chicken manure, 25% pig manure, 25% tofu dregs. Mix the above manures, with a water content of 100%, pile the manure to a height of 20 cm, cover it with agricultural film, and it can be used after 24 to 48 hours. Since it is outdoor breeding, the manure can be directly sent to the breeding pond without fermentation. Send the fermented manure to the maggot house, and pile three in each pond, each 0.8 meters long, 0.2 meters wide, and 0.15 meters high. The time for placing manure is 4 to 5 o'clock every afternoon. Preparation and placement of egg-collecting materials Since it is outdoors, there are more choices for egg-collecting materials. You can put dead fish directly on the dung pile, or you can prepare it according to the following formula: Calculate based on 100 kg of dung: 1 kg of wheat bran, 2 liang of fish meal, 3 liang of peanut bran, and 1.5 kg of water. Mix well and put it on the dung pile. After placing the egg-collecting materials, it is forbidden to walk around the maggot pool. Daily management: Put the dung well, put the egg-collecting materials (preferably dead fish or fish viscera in the first few days to attract wild flies), and in places with more wild flies, a large number of flies will gather on the egg-collecting materials within half an hour to lay eggs. At 9 o'clock in the evening, use a small amount of egg-collecting materials to cover the egg masses laid by the flies with a thin layer to increase the hatching rate and reduce the damage of insects such as ants. The fly eggs will all hatch the next morning. After 36 to 48 hours, the maggots have already made the previously neatly stacked manure pile very messy. After 72 hours, the first grown maggots begin to crawl out of the manure pile and automatically separate and fall into the maggot collection bucket. Generally, the maggots in the manure have been completely separated on the seventh day. Assuming that you have 14 maggot pools, you should add manure to two pools every day. Fill them all on the seventh day. On the eighth day, shovel out the residual manure that has been completely free of maggots on the first day and put in new manure. This cycle of production continues. At 10 o'clock in the morning, collect the maggots from the maggot collection bucket, shovel out the residual manure that has been completely free of maggots, and shovel the manure in other pools that has been loosened by maggots and has been piled up on the edge of the pool into the middle of the manure pile to avoid blockage and maggots cannot tell the way when separating. It is not necessary to feed simple outdoor maggot breeding. However, in order to keep the flies around the maggot breeding room, new manure and egg-collecting materials must be placed every day. The main food of flies comes from manure and egg-collecting materials. Since outdoor maggots cannot be disinfected, the maggots raised must carry a lot of harmful bacteria. It is recommended to soak them in 70,000 parts potassium permanganate water for 5 minutes before feeding them to economic animals.

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