Worms, particularly earthworms, can reproduce through a process called fragmentation, where a part of the worm's body can regenerate into a new individual. However, this is not a common method of reproduction for most species; instead, many worms reproduce sexually by exchanging sperm with another worm during copulation. After mating, they can produce a cocoon containing fertilized eggs. In some cases, if a worm is cut into pieces, each segment may regenerate into a new worm, but this ability varies among different species.
Probably yes - every type of food can get worms except the honey
A small worm farm made from a couple of plastic boxes can start with one or two thousand worms. After a few months, if the worms are well fed and at the right temperature, that number will have turned into five or six thousand worms. You can then split the farm in two, or give some away.
It depends what type of warm you are referring to. Flatworms belong Platyhelminthes Tubeworms belong to Nematodes and Segmented worms belong to Annelids Centipedes and Millipedes are not worms. They belong to the Arthropod Phylum.
All bugs are evolved from these ancient worms that lived underwater. These worms were segmented, and as they evolved these segments were split into different sections to form parts like a head, thorax, and abdomen, or in millipedes the segments stayed kinda similar. Weird.
this is a very interesting question the answere is niether they are a sexual meaning they just split apart and create two worms that is why they have seven hearts
Flatworms such as tape worms and flukes, and roundworms such as trichinosis-causing worms, filarial worms, ascarid worms and hook worms.
Meal-worms are actually beetle grubs - NOT worms.
round worms are round and flat worms are flat!
silk worms are tiny worms hanging from silk on a tree
what are wig worms what are wig worms
No worms do not have bones
Yes, they can have large white roundworms, red stomach worms, whip worms, thread worms, kidney worms, zipper tapeworms, nodule worms, lungworms, thorn-headed worms, and Trichinella worms, among others.