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Wormy Squirmy! Oh No!!! There’s Worms in Fort Bend County!

Wormy Squirmy! Oh No!!! There’s Worms in Fort Bend County!. Vermiculture !. What is this all about?!!!. Co-Presenter; Kenneth Fletcher Certified Master Gardener , FBMG Rainwater Harvesting Specialist. Created and presented by: Margo “Mac” McDowell, Certified Master Gardener and

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Wormy Squirmy! Oh No!!! There’s Worms in Fort Bend County!

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  1. Wormy Squirmy! Oh No!!! There’s Worms in Fort Bend County! Vermiculture! What is this all about?!!! Co-Presenter; Kenneth Fletcher Certified Master Gardener , FBMG Rainwater Harvesting Specialist Created and presented by: Margo “Mac” McDowell, Certified Master Gardener and Certified Master Naturalist Fort Bend County Master Volunteer Coordinator Texas AgriLife Extension Service

  2. Texas AgriLife Extension Service • County based outreach of Texas A&M University System • Provide information and educational programs on: • Agriculture and Natural Resources • Includes Master Gardener and Master Naturalist volunteers • Family and Consumer Sciences • 4-H and Youth Development

  3. Who are these guys? - These worms are known as Eisenia Foetida! (I SEE nee a FET id a). These worms process large amounts of organic materials in their habitats of manure, compost piles or decaying leaves. They are also fast reproducers. Amystewart.com Why is this so important? They are “composters.” They don’t mind being handled. They don’t mind being pets. They can survive in a bin. They eat our garbage!

  4. Why do we need to teach about these yucky creatures! • Introduce Recycling to Children • Importance to environment • Introduce an Ecosystem • shows living organism’s needs • Reduces waste in landfills

  5. How do I get started? 1. Decide on a bin Regardless of choice, aeration is an important function of the controlled environment.

  6. Considerations for a bin: • Location, location, location! • Common materials are wood & plastic. • Must have ventilation because redworms need lots of oxygen. • Ideal bin is shallow because redworms feed upwards so the more surface the more nibbling! • Do not use container that used to store chemicals – no pesticides!

  7. Worm bins need to have an “aerobic” environment. This means oxygen is present throughout the bedding. When bedding becomes packed and pushes all the air out of the layers an “anaerobic” condition occurs. Worms become unhealthy as well as the other microorganisms.

  8. 2. Prepare the “bedding • Worm beddings are important – they provide: • Moisture • Medium in which worms can work • Bury their garbage • Air 3. Use Newspaper! Readily available & no extra cost! Tear into strips and soak in water Squeeze out as much water as possible, then place in bin

  9. Additional bedding materials: Leaf mold Composted Animal manures (horse, rabbit or cow) Additions to bedding: Add handful or two of soil This provides grit to help break down food particles within the worm’s gizzard. Also provides soil bacteria, protozoa and fungi which aid in the composting process.

  10. Worm Facts: No bones, no teeth, no arms, no legs - definitely slimy! Worms keep themselves moist, and need a moist environment. I have 5 hearts! http://www.urbanext.uiuc.edu/worms/anatomy/anatomy2.html

  11. Clitellum Hearts http://universe-review.ca/I10-82-annelid.jpg

  12. Digestive System Worms grind food in their gizzard by muscle action The ground up food is mixed with enzymes in the worm’s intestine. This breaks down the food into the bloodstream for use where needed. Undigested material, including sand, soil, bacterial and plant residues passes out of the worm as a worm casting. whatcom.wsu.edu/ag/compost/images/wormdiagram.gif

  13. What do I feed my worms? Apples Cabbage Pears Watermelon & rinds Coffee grounds & Tea Potatoes – but no butter! Lettuce Celery Pineapples Egg Shells All kinds of fruits – mangos, bananas Cantalopes! I love strawberries!!!

  14. What NOT to feed your worms! If you feed your worms some of these food, you’ll end up with some pretty smelly worm bins! Meats Buttery Foods Oils Dog/Cat manure Fish Poultry Butter Margarine Mayonnaise or salad dressing Colored/glossy paper Pine needles Peanut butter Wood chips No Dairy Products No Bones/ Twigs or branches

  15. Always bury your food in the worm bin or… Fruit Flies is what you’ll get !!!

  16. In the beginning, check your worm bin every week to see how fast the worms are eating the food. The more worms you have, the more food they’ll eat, and you can judge that by keeping track of how much food you are giving them and how fast it disappears. Stats: ½ LB. food per day for 1 LB. of red wigglers Because you’ll have less than one pound of worms, just give handfuls of food and see how fast it disappears.

  17. What are the other “things’ in my bin? Physical Decomposers • Arrive in the pile after lower level decomposers have ‘worked’ material • Grind and chew remaining organic material • Mites, snails, slugs,millipedes, sowbugs, whiteworms

  18. What’s Happening in the Pile? • Organic matter is decomposed by living creatures • Starting materials converted to ‘less complex’ forms • It becomes “unrecognizable” humus

  19. Microscopic Decomposers • Chemically convert organic materials • Mostly single-celled organisms • Bacteria considered most productive • Fungi • Actinomycetes • Protozoa • Rotifers

  20. Red Wigglers were fast reproducers?!!! Redworms can be mature and produce cocoons in eight – ten weeks! http://www.vermiculture.ca/articles/images/15sexworm.gif

  21. Do the math! Once it breeds, a worm can deposit two to three cocoons per week for 6 months to a year. If that’s the case – then if a two-month old breeder laid two cocoons a week for 24 weeks, and two hatchlings emerged from each cocoon, one breeder would produce ______ worms in six months! 96 2 cocoons x 24 weeks x 2 hatchlings Before the first two months are up, the first hatchlings will be able to breed. These could produce two cocoons for 16 weeks with two hatchlings coming from each…

  22. “Exploring! & Gathering! of the “Black Gold!” Harvesting!

  23. Worms Eat My Garbage, Mary Appelhof and The Composting Cookbook by Karen Overgaard

  24. Additional References: Worms Eat My Garbage, by Mary Appelhof The Composting Cookbook, by Karen Overgaard http://www.wormwoman.com/ http://www.urbanext.uiuc.edu/worms/ http://sustainable.tamu.edu/slidesets/kidscompost/kid1.html http://whatcom.wsu.edu/ag/compost/Slide_Show/sld008.htm http://yucky.discovery.com/noflash/worm/index.html http://www.wormdigest.org/

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