Worms can be used for fishing and compost. Worms are important to the ecosystems in which they live and breed.
They can breed and then reproduce again every 27 days.
Bloodworms are the larvae of a tiny midge and would be quite difficult to produce for an ordinary person. They would need special and costly facilities to breed.
All the kinds of worms can breed inside your body.
blood worms
A proper compost bin that is working well will be too hot for worms. If it is set on the ground, then worms will come up from the earth if they want to. You can use a worm farm to break down food scraps. Several thousand worms are good for this, depending on its size, but you can start with a few hundred and they will breed, if you look after them properly.
The basic process of a worm farm, for profit or for your own use and sharing, is to provide worms (usually red worms) a medium where they have adequate food and moisture within contained beds. This allows the worms to eat and breed. Most worms mate by coming to the surface and joining at a particular spot in their bodies. A common earthworm has a recognizable band near it's center where two worms join together.
The basic process of a worm farm, for profit or for your own use and sharing, is to provide worms (usually red worms) a medium where they have adequate food and moisture within contained beds. This allows the worms to eat and breed. Most worms mate by coming to the surface and joining at a particular spot in their bodies. A common earthworm has a recognizable band near it's center where two worms join together.
Guinea fowl are the best breed of chicken for eatting bugs. However, any egg-laying breed (as opposited to meat-giving breed) raised from chicks without an overabundance of cereals, and given worms, grubs, etc. from a young age can perform the task well.
Dry nose is not healthy for any breed as far as I know. It can be dehydration, stress,worms,or illness. Some of these can be very long term. I would talk to a vet.
Drenching for worms, vaccinating against enterotoxaemia and CLA, hoof trimming, vitamin and mineral supplementation, lice treatment. If it is a fibre breed, as in an Angora, twice yearly shearing. If it is a dairy breed, twice daily milking.
Not sure on this, however worms can present health risks such as anemia and being lethargic among others. The needed anesthesia could intensify these or complicate things further. Best bet is to rid the cat of worms first.