The silk worm cacoon fibers are held in the wrapped condition by a natural glue. Under normal circumstances the moth will eat it's way out of the cacoon. This destroys the continuous nature of the fiber because he has chewed through it. The best silk comes from the long contiuous fiber. So before the moth can eat through the cacoon it is immersed in hot water. This disolves the glue and the harvester can pick up the loose end of the silk fiber and unwrap the moth.
If the moth hatches, it chews its way out of the cocoon, cutting all the silk fibers. for silk production, the caterpillar is killed before it hatches, so the silk strands can be unwound and remain whole.
Commercial silk is typically harvested from the silk moth. Yup, that's about it. In ancient China silk was harvested from the tiny cocoons of the silk moth by dropping them into a pot of boiling water.
Silk is the secretion from the spinnerets of the silk moth larva (it's cocoon).
Silkworms, which emerge from their cocoons as moths, spin cocoons that are the raw material for the fibre humans use as silk. Cocoons are harvested from domesticated silkworms by heating the cocoon to kill the animal, then the silk cocoon is unraveled. Once the moth has emerged -- in wild silkworms for example, the cocoon's silk can be harvested, but not in one continuous length. As a moth, there is no connection with the now-discarded cocoon.
The length of silk thread produced by a single silk moth cocoon can vary, but it typically ranges from 300 to 900 meters (about 1,000 to 3,000 feet). This silk is harvested and unwound from the cocoon to create silk fabric. The exact length depends on factors such as the species of the silk moth and the conditions in which it was raised.
A cocoon that produces a live silk moth is the result of the silk-producing process of silkworms, specifically the larvae of the Bombyx mori moth. These cocoon structures are spun by the larvae to protect themselves during their pupal stage as they undergo metamorphosis. The silk fibers are made from proteins secreted by the silkworm, and when the adult moth emerges, it breaks free from the cocoon, allowing for the continuation of the species. In silk production, however, many cocoons are harvested before the moth emerges, as this yields the silk fibers commercially.
Silk fibers are obtained from the cocoon of silk larvae, larvae of the silk moth, which are spun from the cocoon into one, long thread.
The cocoon.
You could call it a cocoon.
Silk is natural, not a man-made polymer. The silk is mainly obtained from the cocoons of the Mulberry Silkworm (Bombyx mori). When the caterpillar forms a pupae, it encases itself in a cocoon of fine silk thread. Before the adult moth emerges, the cocoon is steeped in hot water to kill the developing moth inside. The cocoon is then unravelled and is combined with several other silk threads to produce a strong silk thread that can be used to produce silk fabric.
it is produced by using the liquid in a silk worms mouth.
If the moth hatches, it chews its way out of the cocoon, cutting all the silk fibers. for silk production, the caterpillar is killed before it hatches, so the silk strands can be unwound and remain whole.