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breeding your own mealworms
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TOPIC: breeding your own mealworms

breeding your own mealworms 1 year, 8 months ago #110618

i saw that oscars like bugs and found this sight that has great info on how to breed Mealworms. so i copied the info and posted it. as well as the link so you can go look it over your selfs if you want. i am going to start mine on tuesday as well as starting up breeding my own madagascar hissing cockroach.

the link is www.wormman.com/mealworm_breeding.cfm



Mealworm breeding
Breeding Mealworms and Raising mealworms for Reptiles and Blue Birds.


Mealworms are a widely used food for reptiles (herp food), bait, fishing and for feeding Sugar gliders, and more. Meal worms are also used for fishing. Pan fish love them. We have giant mealworms that are the same species of the regular, but double the size. They make a great bait! If you just want to learn how to raise meal worms just read on!

What you will need to breed mealworms:

1. Container. A Rubbermaid or plastic shoe or sweater box will work well.

2. Bedding. Wheat bran, or whole wheat four will work. So will chicken food.

3. Potatoes for moisture.

4. Starter culture of mealworms

Mealworms are the larval form of the darkling beetle. They make excellent feeders for reptiles, birds and small mammals. Sugar gliders love them. They are easy to raise. We have been doing it for fifteen years. Meal worms are easily grown if you give them the ability to grow. Meal worms need a good quality bedding. By quality we mean clean fresh and a bedding made of wheat bran or whole wheat flour. The bedding will also be the food your mealworms eat. Our meal worm cultures are grown by the millions in large pans filled with wheat bran, which you can get at any farm and feed store. You can also use corn meal, chicken mash. The worms are kept at a constant 77 degrees, but you can keep them anywhere between 45 and 85 degrees. We have found that 77 degrees works best for us. The mealworms will take about 12 weeks to go from egg to worm, to beetle.

To start your mealworm culture pour 1 inch of bedding into the container and add your mealworms. Add a couple thin potato slices and that is it.

The mealworms will morph in a couple weeks into a grub looking thing (picture below). The grubs will become beetles. Place the beetles in a second container with bran and potatoes and let nature do the rest.

The beetles will die after a couple weeks. Keep the container with the bran in a dry area, and add small slices of potato when the slice you have dries out. In a couple weeks you will see tiny mealworms. Each female beetle will lay up to 500 eggs or more.

Here are the basic stages Mealworms go through.

1. The first stage is when the mealworm is in the egg.

2. The second stage is when the meal worm becomes a meal worm. The worms grow and shed their skin many times as they grow. It is good to have fresh bran for food and bedding, and a slice of potato for moisture. The mealworms will drink from the potato. This will also help them to grow large. The worms are very active, friendly, and playful at this age. Kind of like children.

3. In the third stage the mealworm pupates, and becomes a pupae. When the mealworm is a pupae it will not eat or drink. It will just lay around. Kind of like teenagers.



4. In the fourth stage the beetle forms, and live for a couple of weeks. This is the adult stage. This is when the beetle goes out and gets food and makes a home for the new mealworms that will come.



Remove he beetles from the culture of mealworms and place them in their own container of bran.

Please come back often as we are always updating this site.
Last Edit: 1 year, 8 months ago by thecreech77.

Re: breeding your own mealworms 1 year, 8 months ago #110621

in gods name why would you want Madagascar hissing cockroaches

heres some nice hissing:
Last Edit: 1 year, 8 months ago by johnnyphoenix.

Re: breeding your own mealworms 1 year, 8 months ago #110622

i use to breed my own for my bearded dragons. and the fact that they breed fast and can have lots of young and the young can be food for many types of fish and reptiles. and the fact that my oscar is so picky. i thought that it might be a good treat. not to say that pet stores will by them for 2.00 dollors each and i can have hundreds in no time. might be a good way to help make a little extra cash.. lol..

Re: breeding your own mealworms 1 year, 8 months ago #110639

thecreech77 wrote:
i use to breed my own for my bearded dragons. and the fact that they breed fast and can have lots of young and the young can be food for many types of fish and reptiles. and the fact that my oscar is so picky. i thought that it might be a good treat. not to say that pet stores will by them for 2.00 dollors each and i can have hundreds in no time. might be a good way to help make a little extra cash.. lol..


Ah. I thought you meant as a 'pet.' I'm sure they would make great food for an oscar, though.

Re: breeding your own mealworms 1 year, 8 months ago #110647

  • Noddy
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the mealworms should be pretty easy to breed.
Only one sentence caught my attention:
"Meal worms are easily grown if you give them the ability to grow."

usually my oscars will have finished the worms and beetles, before there are any new ones!
They love those darkling beetles very, very much.

My o's eat any insects, but if the bugs become too big, they will refuse them.
Like the mega sized grasshoppers i tried with them.
He just looked at the grasshopper and swam away.
And those are sold for almost the same prize as your hissing bugs... :angry:
Our fish don't grow too big, our tank becomes too small!
Plecofanatic
Primitive fish Keeper : Florida Gar
OscarFishLover!

Re: breeding your own mealworms 1 year, 8 months ago #110714

  • PAUL
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yeah...you can breed your own mealworm... and very easy...however, if any one
full grown beetle will scape in the container and fly around, i can cause
accident with the chasing oscar, or cat or dog LOL

@Noddy, our people will not allow you to have those 3 inches grasshoppers..
whenever we got swarm of locust in the area, people catches them all and
fried for human foods...same is true in thailand....LOL

@thecreech77, our people also eat the big beetle..the june beetle
that normally comes out during flowering months of tamarind trees
Last Edit: 1 year, 8 months ago by .

Re: breeding your own mealworms 1 year, 8 months ago #110729

  • Noddy
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PAUL wrote:

@Noddy, our people will not allow you to have those 3 inches grasshoppers..
whenever we got swarm of locust in the area, people catches them all and
fried for human foods...same is true in thailand....LOL


i may have not tried most of your country's "treats", but must say a ate grasshoppers once on an African birthdayparty. They were fried, and tasted pretty good!

@thecreech77, our people also eat the big beetle..the june beetle
that normally comes out during flowering months of tamarind trees


Same here with the May-beetle, my o's love them, and me and the family would go into the woods, to find them for my O's.
Our fish don't grow too big, our tank becomes too small!
Plecofanatic
Primitive fish Keeper : Florida Gar
OscarFishLover!

Re: breeding your own mealworms 1 year, 8 months ago #110745

well i dont see myself eating them anytime soon. i dont think i could get past the crunch.. but i am goingot breed them for my O. i am going to pick up some crickets while i am at the pet store too. ill try anything to get my pipsqueak to eat a good meal. i just dont want to get any feeder fish that i havent raised. to many things can go wornge with pet store feeder fish. i had planed on picking up some krill or prawns.

Re: breeding your own mealworms 1 year, 8 months ago #110747

  • Noddy
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the feeder fish i feed to my O's are actually meant for my gar, and i allways get them fozen.
Works fine, and my fish never expierienced any disease because of them.
Our fish don't grow too big, our tank becomes too small!
Plecofanatic
Primitive fish Keeper : Florida Gar
OscarFishLover!

Re: breeding your own mealworms 1 year, 8 months ago #110748

Noddy wrote:
the feeder fish i feed to my O's are actually meant for my gar, and i allways get them fozen.
Works fine, and my fish never expierienced any disease because of them.


x2.

Frozen whitebait like atlantic silversides are an excellent source of protein and pose no risk of disease. My oscar loves them.
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