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Raising Blackworms

Mark_C

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Thanks go to Paul B for getting me into this. It's probably the best thing I've done for my fish, though I am still waiting for the supermodels to show up.

Please keep in mind this guide is written for 70-90g tanks. You may have to upscale a bit for a larger system. I'm unsure if it would work, as I've no experience with larger systems, but its so simple I can't see how doubling or tripling the information below would be non-viable.
Also, no need to overthink. This is as easy as it gets. I had a catastrophic disaster and lost my entire previous tank. Took me all of 10 minutes and a trip to buy the worms to get back up and running.

Set-up
Take a small tank, I use a 5 gallon.
Shallow fill (3-5”, more is not better) with RODI or tap water (NO SALT).
Place a single layer of gravel on the bottom (again, more is not better, its detrimental).
Use a small air pump and a generic air-stone.
Add a small plant or two for nitrates (any shallow freshwater plant will do, I’m currently using a bit of java moss) and just let it float about.
Add worms.
Thats it.

Securing worms
Tropaquarium in Ocean sells live worms for $1.50 a tub, 3 tubs for $4. Three tubs should be enough to start up, six would be better if you want to start feeding immediately. When choosing the tubs observe the worms. Greyish worms are dead. White worms that are mobile are leeches (rare). Choose tubs with a good amount of brown and mobile worms (regardless of where you purchase).
Drop the worms into the tank and stir it up a bit. Within a few minute the tank will appear empty as the worms will seek shelter under the gravel.

Feeding the worms
You really don’t need to. They can survive off the plant matter and residuals. But they do, in my experience, like kale, seaweed, and lettuce and will gather near it.

Water changes
Every once in a while I tend to use a plastic cup to remove a cup or so of water and then replace it with a cup of RODI (or tap if you prefer).

Temperature
Room temperature is fine but slightly chilled is better. No heaters.

Lighting
Whatever the room lighting is.

Here’s how you get more worms
Blackworms reproduce by fragmentation. A scraping or split of the worm creates another, thus the gravel, you want them moving around in it.
I agitate the gravel with a turkey baster every night, causing a bit of fragmenting disturbance.
I’ve also found that the worms like to gather near a supplemental food source. So, I attach a small piece of lettuce to a clip and drop it into a corner of the tank. The next day I move the food to the opposite end of the tank. They crawl to it, split and form more worms.

Harvesting
A simple turkey baster is used to agitate the substrate and to collect worms. Simply suck up some water, blast it slowly into the gravel, and suck up some of the worms that are disturbed. Dispense into a cup or a container. The worms are heavy and will sink to the bottom, plus they cluster up into a ball, so you can pour most of the collected water out.

Feeding
Just dip the cup or container into tank water to fill it up. The worms will break from the ball they formed and start darting in all directions due to the salt. Then, pour into tank. You’ll be amazed at how quickly the worms disappear.

Stocking
It takes about 2 weeks for a worm to become viable from a fragmentation. If you purchase a small amount of worms and initially feed sparingly, you should be able to maintain and build your population. If you feed heavily you can use your tank as a live food storage and just refill when necessary.

A couple of shots showing simple tank setup and then slightly agitated tank...

IMG_2458_zpsls6yjk3i.jpg


IMG_2457_zpsqcjxd2vn.jpg
 
Last edited:

redfishbluefish

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Interest post....good information. For what it's worth, when I looked into raising worms back in 2007, they suggested putting brown paper bag pieces in the tank for a food source, and change it out about every two weeks. I never did set up a breeding tank, but this post has me scratching my head once again.
 

TanksNStuff

Officer Emeritus
Officer Emeritus
Interest post....good information. For what it's worth, when I looked into raising worms back in 2007, they suggested putting brown paper bag pieces in the tank for a food source, and change it out about every two weeks. I never did set up a breeding tank, but this post has me scratching my head once again.

Same with me Paul. I've been wanting to do this for years and just never got around to it. Paul B's original suggestion to me was to setup a shallow trough type tank with slow running water (to help keep the worms clean) that drained on one end with a filter to keep the worms in the trough. The drain went to a small sump tank that basically just had a small powerhead to act as a return pump and some minor filtration media to clean the waste, etc from the worms.

Your method looks much easier though and I like the implementation of the gravel to help split them.

I think I'm going to give this one a shot SOON [SUP]tm[/SUP]
 

Mark_C

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they suggested putting brown paper bag pieces in the tank for a food source

Could do that. Any brown, unbleached paper or cardboard would work. Basis is that the enzymes that break the paper down put nitrates into the water that the worms survive off of. The plant does the same thing but requires only a cup or so water change every once in a while and doesn't leave any debris behind.
I've only the plant and my tank has tripled in population since the op photo was taken.

Saying that, I'm now curious if adding some unbleached paper would increase the population any quicker. May have to give it a go and find out.
 
Mark

Quick question on the gravel. We are talking just plain old aquarium gravel right? The cheap stuff?
 

Mark_C

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Yep, plain old gravel. I picked up a bag of natural gravel at Petco for a few bucks.
 
Very interesting indeed. Now i can put that small 5 gallon tank into use lol. Thanks for the info.

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