1. How much water should be put in to raise red worms?If you want to raise red worms, 5 liters of water will be enough. However, if the water used to cultivate them is not appropriate, they may drown or die for other reasons. For example, water depth is an important factor. When cultivating red worms, the water should not be too deep. The depth of the breeding pond should be about 20 cm, and a few centimeters is enough for domestic breeding. In addition, water quality and dissolved oxygen content are also very important. Therefore, not changing the water for a long time will also lead to the death of red worms. 2. How to raise red worms?In the process of artificial breeding, the water depth is generally maintained at about three to five centimeters. Especially in spring, when artificial breeding is carried out, the water level can be slightly lowered. This method can effectively increase the water temperature. Deepening the water level at night can effectively keep warm. Fertile water with a steady flow can allow red worms to reproduce in large numbers. At this time, you can place the silt and red worms together in a clean glass container and use some natural pure water for breeding. If you want to use tap water for breeding, you must place them under sunlight for two or three days before using them as reasonable breeding water. Change the water in time every day and take some very good warming measures. Red worms mainly eat organic fertilizers and like some sour and sweet feeds. Generally, they need to be fed once every three days. One mu of land should be fertilized with more than 50 kg of fertilizer each time, and a certain amount of water should be added, and then sprinkled after sufficient stirring. 3. How much water is suitable for raising red worms?If you want to raise red worms, 5 liters of water will be enough. However, if the water used to cultivate them is not appropriate, they may drown or die for other reasons. For example, water depth is an important factor. When cultivating red worms, the water should not be too deep. The depth of the breeding pond should be about 20 cm, and a few centimeters is enough for domestic breeding. In addition, water quality and dissolved oxygen content are also very important. Therefore, not changing the water for a long time will also lead to the death of red worms. 4. How to breed red worms?Step/Method 1 Pool and density: When breeding red worms artificially, the number is generally large, and it is very common to breed them on a large scale. The first thing to pay attention to is the breeding pool and density. You can use a cement pool to breed red worms. The depth of the water can be controlled at 20-30 cm. It does not need to be too deep. Some silt can be placed at the bottom of the pool. The number of red worms should not be too large, otherwise the dissolved oxygen in the water will be insufficient, and there will be insufficient food. Step/Method 2 Food: There are many kinds of food that red worms can eat. Some red worms only eat meat, while others are omnivorous and can eat both meat and vegetables. Even some bacteria can become their food. If you are breeding red worms artificially, you can also add some glucose to the water, which will help the red worms grow better. Step/Method 3 Water temperature: When breeding red worms, you need to pay special attention to the water temperature, because the water temperature has a relatively large impact on the growth and development of red worms. Red worms are more afraid of heat, but not too afraid of cold, so it can be kept at around 10 degrees, or even more than 10 degrees. When the temperature is suitable, the growth and reproduction speed of red worms are relatively fast. Step/Method 4 Water change: When breeding red worms, you must pay attention to water changes, otherwise the water quality will be poor and the dissolved oxygen content will be insufficient. The specific frequency of water changes can be determined according to the state of the water in the pool, and the water quality in the pool can be monitored in real time. Step/Method 5 Light: Red worms don't like strong light, so try to keep the pool darker. If there is strong light during the day, it is recommended to cover it in time. 5. 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. 6. How to feed goldfish with red worms?Red worms usually grow in rivers, streams, banks and ponds, where the water is relatively rich and dirty. In order to prevent fish diseases, goldfish should also avoid "diseases from the mouth". So how to raise goldfish? How to feed goldfish with red worms caught from the river? Rinse the goldfish feed red worms before feeding. If you encounter diesel or something like that when fishing for worms, don't panic. After catching the red worms, hold the middle part of the net bag with one hand at the riverside to prevent the red worms from leaking out, sink the lower half of the net bag into the water, and use your other hand to knock on the lower half with the red worms. Because oil is lighter than water, after repeated knocking and flushing, the diesel and the like will gradually float up. This is the first rinsing. After returning to the farm (home), use the same method to get a large basin of clean water, rinse it under the tap for a while according to the above method, and knock the red worms with one hand to let the oil float up again. This is the second rinse, and then pour the red worms from the net bag into a large basin or small tank. Add 2/3 of water, float the red worms, check for pests or dirt, and then use a large-eye scoop net to remove the dirt. This is the third rinse, and then you can use 2-3 mg/L potassium permanganate solution to bathe the red worms for 3-5 minutes. After the red worms are treated in this way, you can use a coarse-screened silk or gauze scoop net to fish out the big red worms to feed the big fish, and use a fine-screened silk scoop net to fish out the remaining small red worms to feed the fry or young fish. After several rinses, it basically reaches the level of cleanliness, which has a certain positive effect on preventing and reducing the occurrence of goldfish diseases. Family fish breeders can also use submerged water to keep live red worms sparsely in basins, tanks and other containers, and put on aeration heads to increase oxygen. Generally, they can be kept for a day in summer and 3-5 days in winter without dying. This can save a little time and avoid the trouble of going out to catch worms every day. 7. How to raise red worms at home?Raising red worms at home is a common idea among many outdoor anglers. If you really ask how to raise them, most of them may not know. The red worms you usually buy are not easy to survive in water, and it may be even more difficult to raise them. Can you raise red worms at home? The answer is yes, but you may not have the patience to raise them and give up halfway. First, red worms cannot simply be soaked in water for a long time. You should add river mud or pond mud, preferably with more sand. The water should also be natural water, not tap water, because tap water contains bleach, which will kill the red worms. It is best to change the water once a day, because the water in the natural environment is flowing water, or slightly flowing water. Second, the breeding container. It is best to use a wide-mouthed glass container for breeding, as this container has a large contact area between water and air, high dissolved oxygen, and good light. Third, the light source is very important. When breeding red worms at night, there must be sufficient light source, a small-power bulb will do. Anyway, the light source must be sufficient. When the temperature is high, the red worms will float to the surface of the water to breathe fresh air and bask in the sun. 4. Food. The food of bloodworms is similar to that of earthworms. Bran, fruit peels, sugarcane bagasse, fermented poultry manure, and even silt can be used as food for bloodworms. 5. Temperature. Never freeze red worms, as they will die if frozen. It is best to keep the temperature above 20 degrees. When the temperature is above 25 degrees, red worms can reproduce. 8. How to raise red worms?There are many ways to raise red worms. Here I share a simple and practical method of raising red worms using a flower pot. 1. Put a round sponge at the bottom of the flower pot (wet the sponge in water first), put some soil for raising earthworms on the sponge, sprinkle some water on the soil and mix well, not too much water. Spread the purchased red worms on the soil. Get a sponge about 2 cm thick that is as big as the mouth of the flower pot, soak it in water and squeeze it with both hands to make sure there is not too much water in the sponge, and cover the red worms. 2. Place the flower pot in a plastic basin and add three centimeters of water to the plastic basin. 3. Place the plastic basin in a cool and ventilated place, and avoid exposure to the sun; add some water to the plastic basin regularly to keep the water three centimeters deep. In this way, the water in the plastic basin can continuously seep into the bottom of the flower pot, then seep into the sponge at the bottom of the pot, and then seep into the nearby soil through the sponge, so that the soil is always moist, and the red worms can not only survive, but also absorb nutrients in the soil to grow. Regularly soak the sponge covering the red worms in water, squeeze out excess water, and then cover it. When it freezes in winter, place the plastic basin in a non-freezing place indoors to prevent the red worms from freezing to death, and do not cover the flower pot tightly without ventilation to suffocate the red worms. 9. What is the best method for breeding red worms at home?1. Breeding conditions: To breed red worms, prepare a glass container, then put red worms and unpolluted natural water into it. 2. Control the light source: Hang a 5-watt bulb above the container to provide 24 hours of light for the red worms every day. 3. Water quality control: Change the water once a day and clean the bloodworms and mucus on the utensils. 10. How much water is needed to prevent red worms from dying?Red worms will basically not drown if they are kept in water because they live in water themselves. 20 cm for deep water However, if the water used to cultivate them is not appropriate, they may drown or die for other reasons. For example, water depth is an important factor. When cultivating red worms, the water should not be too deep. The depth of the breeding pond should be about 20 cm, and a few centimeters is enough for domestic breeding. In addition, water quality and dissolved oxygen content are also very important. Therefore, not changing the water for a long time will also lead to the death of red worms. |
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