To farm mealworms, start by creating a suitable habitat, such as a plastic bin with a lid, filled with about 2-3 inches of wheat bran or oats as bedding. Introduce mealworm larvae, and maintain a warm environment (around 70-80°F or 21-27°C) with good ventilation. Feed them a diet of fruits, vegetables, or grains, and keep the bedding slightly moist. Harvest the mature mealworms after several weeks, separating them from the bedding for use as feed or other purposes.
No, there are no worms in chocolate milk. Chocolate milk is made from milk, cocoa, sugar, and sometimes other flavorings or additives, but it does not contain worms.
No, cats cannot get worms from drinking milk.
They will not harm them; however they will not live on the food scrapes you are putting in your farm like the red worms will.
it could milk is bad for cats cats are lactos and tolerate
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.
A dairy farm
no they got it from worms
Do you mean silk worms if so yes you can
Drinking milk won't directly give a grown cat worms. Worms are usually transmitted through eating infected prey, such as rodents or insects, or contact with contaminated soil. However, excess milk can cause gastrointestinal upset in cats due to lactose intolerance.
No worms do not east pasta, in fact it's not good for worms they need to eat organic foods from soil.
Sometimes but not all the time... They'll get worms if you feed them to much cream milk and milk...
if it is not cleaned or from a forein area