It can take anywhere from 2,000 to 3,000 silkworms to produce enough silk for one piece of clothing, such as a silk blouse or a scarf. The amount of silk produced by each silkworm is relatively small, so a large number of silkworms are needed to create a single garment.
The silkworm is the larva or caterpillar of the domesticated silkmoth, Bombyx mori (Latin: "silkworm of the mulberry tree"). It is an important economic insect since it is the producer of silk. A silkworm's preferred food is white mulberry leaves, but it may also eat the leaves of the Osage Orange or the Tree of Heaven. It is entirely dependent on humans for its reproduction and no longer occurs naturally in the wild. Sericulture has been practised for at least 5,000 years in China.It was domesticated from the wild silkmoth Bombyx mandarina which has a range from northern India to northern China, Korea, Japan and far eastern Russia. It derives from Chinese rather than Japanese or Korean stock.[1] The breeding of silkworms cannot have originated before the Neolithic as the tools necessary to make use of the silk thread on a large scale only have become available since then. The domesticated and wild species can still breed and so hybridize together.The full genome of the silkworm was published in 2008 by the International Silkworm Genome Consortium.[2]
They will hatch 14 days (2 weeks) after being refridgerated over night
The primary hypothesis is that they were led to extinction by hunting by humans.
Yes, it has.
Usaully the extinction of large animals is due to them dying out, eating each other at young which stops the production of the babies, or leaving their homeland for an unknown reason.
Yes , species with very small populations are at the verge of extinction as compared to large population .
The extinction of so many organisms left a large ecological niche to expand into, which mammals did.
Silkworm silk is more easily domesticated and produced in controlled environments, making it more economically viable for mass production. Spider silk, on the other hand, is stronger and more elastic but harder to harvest in large quantities as spiders are territorial and cannibalistic, making them more difficult to manage in captivity.
The death of every member of a species is called extinction. When a large number of different species is dies out at the same time it is called mass extinction.
The Permian era experienced the largest mass extinction event in Earth's history, known as the Permian-Triassic extinction. This event, often referred to as the "Great Dying," was caused by intense volcanic activity releasing large amounts of greenhouse gases and leading to rapid climate change, making conditions difficult for many species to survive.
The K-T (Cretaceous and Tertiary) boundary event thought to have been caused by the impact of a large meteorite forming the Chicxulub crater as well as very large scale volcanic activity (in this case the large igneous province known as the Deccan Traps) is a very good example and is thought to have been responsible for the extinction of the dinosaurs.