Yes Chickens like bugs and worms When you see a chicken scratching around in the yard that is what they are doing, they are looking for things to eat.
A mature red wiggler can produce two to three cocoons per week. Each cocoon averages three hatchlings. Cocoons take up to 11 weeks to mature and hatch. Hatchlings require two to three months before they grow to be mature breeding worms.
How much worms eat depends on the type and size of the worms in question. In general, earthworms such as red wigglers can eat half their body weight every day.
A Red-Bone Hound
Small red insect eggs can be spider eggs. Boxelders can also lay small red eggs as well as a number of other insects. If you are worried, buy some insecticide.
Red wigglers eat compost.
Pikatchu
red wigglers
Eisenia fetida
The pad over the mouth, stretches to look for food and pushes it into the mouth.
They are helpful because they are actually helping us recycle and make this world a better place.
Red wigglers are hermaphroditic, meaning they have both male and female reproductive structures. During mating, two worms exchange sperm with each other through a process called copulation. Sperm is stored in a receptacle in each worm's body and can be used to fertilize eggs laid by the other worm.
Red wigglers, popular composting worms, can be found in leaf litter, tools and in the subsurface. They do not burrow down deeply. The conditions they need are damp, dark conditions such leafed thin the ground cover of leaves, and even within manure piles on farms. They are highly adaptable, though, and can be found in rainforests, grasslands, bushland, all within a range of climates.
Yes Chickens like bugs and worms When you see a chicken scratching around in the yard that is what they are doing, they are looking for things to eat.
first you have to eat the apple and then you could compost it feedit to red wigglers(they are a type of worm that eats the vegetation and the vegetation can turn it to composted soil).
wrigglers or wigglers
Chicago Red Stars was created in 2007.