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DEAR NEW FARM:
I am growing nightcrawlers in our basement in a large fish tank,
which I have converted into a worm farm. So far it’s doing
pretty good; I used worm soil, cardboard sheets, fed them some coffee
grounds, and added a little nutrients to the soil. What I am wondering
is how long before they start to multiply? I am growing them for
fishing bait and have kept them alive since this last year’s
fishing season. Thank you for your response.
Sincerely,
Connie Bourk
Colorado
DEAR CONNNIE:
We posed your question to worm guru Amy Stewart, author of The
Earth Moved: On the remarkable achievements of earthworms (Algonquin
Books, 2004). Here's what she had to say:
“Nightcrawlers (Lumbricus terrestris) are
almost impossible to raise in captivity. They need enough ordinary
garden soil to allow them to build permanent burrows, and they
really don't live in an active compost kind of environment (kitchen
scraps, etc.). There is no way to tell when or if they might reproduce
in this environment. Nightcrawlers sold as bait are picked from
fields, not raised in beds. I'm not saying it can't be done, but
it's difficult and there's no good data on reproduction in captivity
that I know of.
You might try a worm known as Eisenia hortensis,
sometimes called a European nightcrawler. The following website
has info on that worm, which is almost as large and can be raised
more easily in captivity: www.nyworms.com/eurocrawlers.htm.”
NF
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