Liaoning Panjin Centipede Breeding, Liaoning Jinzhou Centipede Breeding Technology, Liaoning Chaoyang Centipede Breeding Prospects
The Nongke Humin Breeding Farm specializes in breeding golden-headed centipedes and feed yellow mealworms, integrating farming, sales, and product recycling into a large-scale breeding farm. With a pragmatic and honest approach, it helps many customers breed golden-headed centipedes and feed yellow mealworms to achieve the maximum return on investment.
Supported by Huazhong Agricultural University: A key university under the national "211 Project" - Huazhong Agricultural University collaborates with Wuhan Nongke Humin Bioengineering Co., Ltd. to jointly research and promote scientific agriculture and technological enrichment of centipede breeding techniques: Humin No. 2 Golden-Headed Centipede.
Advanced Technology Advantage: Through years of breeding observation, multiple biological experts and professors of bioengineering from Wuhan Nongke Humin Bioengineering Co., Ltd. and Huazhong Agricultural University have used selective purification technology and biological gene improvement engineering to cultivate a new generation variety - Humin No. 2 Golden-Headed Centipede. After feeding observations, this variety is easy to raise, gentle in nature, adaptable, grows fast, has a high reproduction rate, better medicinal value, and more significant economic value, making it an ideal investment project for many breeders.
Complete Breeding Facilities: The company leverages its agricultural science advantages and life sciences as its specialty, relying on experts and scholars from the College of Animal Science and Technology, focusing on modern bioengineering, special animal husbandry, and insect resource development. It integrates scientific research, breeding, teaching, promotion, technical services, production, sales, and import-export trade into a high-tech enterprise. It owns large ecological breeding areas, solar house breeding areas, greenhouse breeding areas, and separate technical training centers, seedling cultivation centers, germplasm rooms, incubation rooms, and gene transformation rooms, ensuring excellent infrastructure and a complete system.
Wuhan Nongke Humin Company: Upholding the tradition of "diligent reading and hard work, self-establishment and helping others," our company aims at "scientific agriculture" as its purpose and adopts the business philosophy of "integrity, dedication, practicality, innovation, and win-win" to promote the industrial development of centipede resources. We are committed to providing farmers with higher-quality, high-yield seedlings, advanced technology, and more comprehensive services, keeping up with the times and jointly creating a brighter future.
Wuhan Nongke Humin Centipede Breeding Official Website: hm9188.com/index1.asp
Consultation: 027-87672386 or 87672385 Mr. Yu, Add QQ for detailed information: 1229441013
Mr. Guo: 1 5 5 2 7 8 2 6 1 5 8
Hubei Nongke Humin Centipede Breeding Base Address: Room 318, Tianhui Building, Huazhong Agricultural University, Wuchang District, Wuhan City.
Reasonable control of breeding density to prevent centipedes from killing each other:
In situations where the living density of centipedes is too high or there are frequent disturbances, it can easily lead to mutual killing and death. However, under breeding conditions, with improvements in living environment and breeding conditions, such as providing sufficient fresh feed and water sources and minimizing disturbances to their lives, even if the breeding density is relatively high, it will not significantly affect their lives. Especially for centipedes born from the same mother who have lived together since they were young, even after growing up, dozens of them can coil together and live harmoniously. Therefore, providing enough fresh feed and water sources and maintaining a quiet environment are essential conditions for artificial centipede breeding. Unless needed for seedling cultivation, mixing young centipedes from different breeding pools should be avoided as much as possible.
Mastering the dietary habits of centipedes and scientifically adjusting centipede feed:
Wild centipedes are typical carnivorous insects, relatively fierce, capturing various small animals much larger than themselves using their venomous jaw claws. The preferred animal feeds for centipedes include earthworms, pill bugs, spiders, dragonflies, woodlice, mantises, locusts, crickets, oil beetles, mole crickets, cicadas, backward-moving worms, hornets, various fish, frogs, geckos, mutton, beef, rabbit meat, eggs, chicken, sparrow meat, snake meat, blowflies, centipedes, silkworm pupae, goat milk, cow milk, etc. When the supply of animal feed is insufficient, they also consume plant-based feed. To reduce breeding costs and expand feed sources, Xi Wang Medicinal Animal Breeding Farm places particular emphasis on the development and utilization of plant-based feeds and has developed several mixed feed formulas that centipedes particularly enjoy. The plant-based feeds used include wheat flour, rice flour, millet flour, corn flour, sorghum flour, bran, rice bran, corn husks, black bean skins, soybean cake, peanut cake, rapeseed cake (buried pit detoxification treatment), cottonseed cake (usage should not exceed 10%, drug detoxification treatment required), locust leaf powder, soybean skin, etc.
Although centipedes have a wide range of food sources, they require fresh food and do not eat rotten food. Therefore, in artificial breeding, to facilitate feed management and ensure the freshness and cleanliness of the feed, the feed should not be directly scattered in the centipede activity area or resting stacks to avoid moldy leftover feed, which could lead to the spread of fungal diseases. Instead, the feed and drinking water should be placed in dedicated feeding trays or water trays, which must be placed at fixed times and locations, without arbitrarily changing the time and location. Generally, the feeding tray should be delivered to the designated location before sunset in the afternoon and removed the next morning for cleaning and reuse.
Centipedes have a large appetite and strong resistance to hunger. When hungry, their single intake can reach 1/5 to 3/5 of their body weight. After eating full, they can survive for ten days to half a month without food. However, centipedes cannot withstand thirst and need water every day. Therefore, water containers must be placed in the breeding area, and water must be changed regularly to keep the drinking water fresh and clean.
Mastering the egg-laying patterns of centipedes and creating the best hatching environment:
Every late spring to early summer is the egg-laying period for centipedes. Each female centipede generally lays between 20 to 60 eggs, mostly between 40 to 50 eggs, with a few laying less than 10 eggs. Before laying eggs, the centipede's abdomen tightly adheres to the ground, digging a shallow hole by itself. During egg-laying, the centipede's body curves into an "S" shape, laying eggs one by one in a string into the self-dug shallow hole. In the absence of external disturbance, the egg-laying process takes about 2 to 3 hours. After laying, the centipede immediately turns its body sideways, using its legs to gather the eggs into a cluster and hatches them in its "arms." The laid eggs are elliptical, varying in size, with a general diameter of about 3 to 3.5 mm, light yellow, semi-transparent, and with elastic egg membranes.
The incubation period for centipede eggs is relatively long, generally requiring 43 to 50 days. During the hatching process, both the external appearance and internal structure change gradually as the embryo develops. After about a month, the eggs initially form a larval shape, approximately 1.2 cm in length, visible through the movement of the larvae inside the egg membrane. After 35 to 40 days, the larvae are about 1.5 cm long and can crawl up and down but still cannot leave the mother's body. After 43 to 45 days, the larvae are about 2.5 cm long, can leave the mother's body, and begin searching for food independently.
During the incubation period, the mother does not eat, drink water, or leave the nest for activities. Therefore, during the entire incubation period, the humidity around the centipedes should be kept relatively stable; excessive humidity or dryness will affect the hatching of centipedes and may even cause the mother to eat the eggs or young centipedes, affecting the hatching rate and survival rate of the larvae. For breeders with limited experience, before the centipedes build nests and lay eggs, pots or multiple pots of moisture-loving plants, such as spider plants, can be placed on top of the centipede breeding stacks. Every time the plants are watered, the water seeps through the pot. As long as the plants remain healthy, the humidity of the stack is basically stable. Once the mother centipede finds a suitable place on the stack to build a nest, you must maintain the health of the plants. If the leaves of the plants show signs of wilting, water them promptly. If root rot occurs, it indicates excessive humidity, and watering must be stopped.
During the egg-laying or incubation period of centipedes, if disturbed by external factors, the centipedes will stop laying eggs and may eat all the already laid or incubating eggs. This is what is known as the "protective" reaction of centipedes. After centipedes eat their eggs, they can usually re-lay and incubate eggs. However, this significantly delays the egg-laying and hatching periods, reduces the number of eggs laid, lowers the hatching rate, and affects the yield and quality of centipedes. Therefore, during artificial breeding of centipedes, during the egg-laying and incubation periods of centipedes, the surrounding environment should be kept quiet, avoiding any disturbances, which is an important matter that must be noted in breeding management.