1. How to cultivate red worms for feeding fish?How to cultivate bloodworms for fish feeding: 1. Red worms like to live in fertile water with slow flow. Late spring and early autumn every year is the season when red worms reproduce in large numbers. They float on the water surface, often making the water surface brown-red. This is an excellent opportunity to collect red worms. 2. When breeding a small amount of bloodworms at home, you can take the river pond sludge together with the bloodworms and put them in a basin or glass container. It is best to soak them with river water. If you use tap water for breeding, you should dry the tap water for 2 to 3 days in advance to remove bleach and other substances. Change the water every other day. In winter, you need to prevent freezing and put a wet red cloth on the container to keep it moist. 3. It is best to use a container with a larger area in contact with the air, because the red worms will float to the water surface and make breathing-like movements, so if there are too many of them, some of them may not be able to compete for a position and die. 4. Light source is necessary for raising red worms. The light source cannot be turned off at night. You can use a small light source (such as a 5w night light, etc.) at night. Because red worms are too lazy to breathe, if there is no light source, they will die easily the next day. 5. There are specialized breeding farms, most of which ferment rice bran, sawdust, banana peels, bagasse, sludge, pigeon droppings, etc. to make breeding feed. For home breeding of red worms, you can use yeast powder soaked in water to feed them, but the amount must be controlled. 6. When the number of red worms increases, they should be collected and dried in time. In late autumn and winter, the reproduction capacity of red worms is greatly weakened. In winter, when you can't see the red worms in the water tank, don't pour out the water in the tank, because they are hiding in the green algae. You can put the water tank in a sunny room or near the radiator. In spring, when the indoor temperature rises, the red worms come out again. When the room temperature rises to above 28℃, the red worms begin to reproduce in large numbers. 2. What is the best way to raise red worms?1. Breeding conditions: Red worms like to live in micro-flowing fertile water. Artificial breeding must meet this condition. They will reproduce in large numbers in late spring and early autumn. They must be collected in containers. It is best to raise them with natural water and take anti-cold measures when the temperature is low. 2. Control the light source: Red worms like light, so the lights should not be turned off at night, otherwise they will easily die. 3. Water quality control: The water level can be slightly shallower during the day to increase the water temperature, and the water level can be deepened at night. 4. Feeding bait: Ferment rice bran, silt, pigeon droppings, sawdust, etc. into feed. 3. How to breed red worms?Step/Method 1 When breeding red worms, prepare a glass container, put the selected red worms into it, and then inject clean and sterile natural water. If you want to use tap water for breeding, it is best to expose the tap water to the sun for 2-3 days to remove the chlorine in it to prevent poor growth of the red worms. Step/Method 2 Control light source The growth of red worms cannot be separated from light. Lack of light source will cause the red worms to have difficulty breathing and suffocate to death. When breeding, it is best to hang a 5-watt light bulb above the container to provide the red worms with sufficient light, allowing them to breathe freely and grow healthily. Step/Method 3 Water quality control When breeding red worms, the water should be changed once a day to keep the water clean. In the process of changing the water, the red worms and the container should be cleaned to remove the mucus to avoid the breeding of bacteria. The breeding water depth should be controlled at about 3-5 cm, and the water level should be deepened at night to keep warm. Step/Method 4 Feeding. Red worms mainly feed on organic debris in the soil, and they particularly like sweet and acidic baits. Poultry manure, domestic sewage, etc. are all their baits. In professional farms, rice bran, sawdust, sludge, pigeon manure and other raw materials are generally fermented to make feed. If it is a family farm, yeast powder can be soaked in water and fed. Feeding is also a key point in red worm production. Feeding in small amounts and multiple times can increase production. Generally, feeding is done once every 3-4 days, and 50 to 100 kilograms of manure is fed per mu each time. It is mixed with water and sprinkled throughout the pond. When feeding, pay attention to the amount of residual bait, and do not blindly feed more, so as to avoid excessive organic matter in the water body causing fermentation to produce toxic substances, affecting production. 4. What kind of feed should be used to raise earthworms and red worms?Earthworms have a diverse diet. They like to eat rotten organic matter rich in protein and sugar, as well as weeds, fallen leaves, vegetable fragments, livestock and poultry manure, etc. They will eat almost everything except metal, plastic, glass and rubber. In productive breeding, crop straw, dead branches and leaves, aquatic plants, livestock manure, bagasse, vegetables and fruits, livestock and poultry waste, and domestic garbage can be crushed, fermented, and used as base materials for breeding earthworms, and livestock and poultry waste, vegetables and fruits, wheat bran, rice bran, various green vegetables, cornmeal, etc. can be used as feed. Vegetables, fruits, livestock and poultry waste, etc. must be chopped before use as feed. When using dry plants as base materials, they should be crushed into segments or blocks of about 1 cm for later use. Livestock and poultry manure should be crushed and disinfected for later use. Domestic garbage should be crushed before use, and the parts that earthworms cannot eat, such as plastic, metal, bricks and tiles, should be picked out first. During fermentation, first spread a layer of garden soil 10 to 15 cm thick on the ground, then a layer of grass about 10 cm thick on the soil, and then a layer of manure about 10 cm thick on the grass. The grass and manure layers are repeatedly piled up to about 1 meter high, usually with manure accounting for 60% and grass accounting for about 40%. Do not compact the materials when piling. After 3 to 5 layers are piled up, water is sprayed on the pile. After the pile is completed, water is sprayed on the pile again until water seeps out from under the pile. Then cover it with plastic film. Turn the pile once every 10-15 days. When turning the pile, turn it inside out and upside down, and mix the grass and manure. Turn the pile again after 10-15 days. After turning the pile 3-4 times, open the pile and check whether it is fully fermented. If the fermentation is not sufficient, ferment it again until it is fully fermented. 5. How to raise red worms?To raise red worms, you must first collect them and then prepare the breeding containers. During the breeding process, you must do a good job of water quality management, light source control, feed feeding, etc. When the number of red worms increases, you must harvest them in time and dry them. 1. Red worm collection Red worms like to live in fertile water with slow flow. Late spring and early autumn every year is the season when red worms reproduce in large numbers. They float on the water surface, often making the water surface brown-red. This is a great opportunity for us to collect red worms. 2. Cultivation vessels When raising a small amount of bloodworms at home, you can take the river pond sludge together with the bloodworms and put them in a basin or glass container. It is best to soak them in river water. If you use tap water for breeding, you should dry the tap water for 2 to 3 days in advance to remove bleach and other substances. Change the water every other day. In winter, you need to prevent freezing and put a wet red cloth on the container to keep it moist. It is best to use a container with a large area of contact with air, because the bloodworms will float to the surface of the water and have a breathing-like movement, so if there are a lot of them, some of them may not be able to compete for a position and die. 3. Light source control A light source is necessary for raising red worms, and the light source cannot be turned off at night. You can use a small light source (such as a 5-watt night light, etc.) at night, because red worms are too lazy to breathe, and if there is no light source, they will easily die the next day. 4. Feeding Most large-scale professional red worm farms use rice bran, sawdust, banana peels, bagasse, sludge, pigeon manure, etc. to ferment and make them into breeding feed. Home-based red worm breeding can use yeast powder soaked in water to feed, but the amount must be controlled. 5. Harvest and Overwintering When the number of red worms increases, they should be collected and dried in time. In late autumn and winter, the reproduction capacity of red worms is greatly weakened. When you can't see the red worms in the water tank, don't pour out the water in the tank, because they are hiding in the green algae. You can put the water tank in a sunny room or near the radiator. In spring, when the indoor temperature rises, the red worms come out again. When the room temperature rises above 28℃, the red worms begin to reproduce in large numbers. 6. What food should be fed to farmed red worms?Answer: (1) Red worms feed mainly on organic debris in the mud and love to eat bait with a sweet and sour taste. Their main sources of bait are poultry manure, domestic sewage, and waste from agricultural and sideline product processing. (2) In professional breeding farms, raw materials such as rice bran, sawdust, banana peels, sugarcane bagasse, and pigeon manure are generally fermented first and then made into feed for red worms. 7. How to breed red worms?Feeding red worms Specialized farms mostly ferment rice bran, sawdust, banana peels, bagasse, sludge, pigeon droppings, etc. to make feed. For home-breeding red worms, you can feed them with yeast powder soaked in water, but the amount must be controlled. 8. What kind of feed is best for red worms?Red worms mainly feed on organic debris in the silt and like to eat sweet and sour fish bait. If they are in professional farms, they also eat feed fermented from raw materials such as rice bran, sawdust, banana peels, bagasse, and pigeon manure. 9. What kind of feed is best for red worm breeding bases?Feeding Most large-scale professional red worm farms use rice bran, sawdust, banana peels, bagasse, sludge, pigeon manure, etc. to ferment and make them into breeding feed. Home-based red worm breeding can use yeast powder soaked in water to feed, but the amount must be controlled. |
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