Jump to navigation

  •  
  •  
  •  

  • Courses
  • Resources
  • Case study
  • Showcase
  • Tools
  • Gallery
  • Videos

Search form

Animation Design Communication Design Design Fundamentals Interaction Design Product Design Tools for Design Open Design
Home / Gallery / Cocoon Formation

.

top unblocked 76 games free access unblocked games 76 now latest unblocked online games kays games unblocked access retro bowl unlimited play play retro bowl without block cool math brain games free school-friendly unblocked games yohoho io game online lesson guru hack and help play baseball bros unblocked classroom 6x games to play 76
Design Gallery

Cocoon Formation

by
Prof. Bibhudutta Baral
NID, Bengaluru
  • Printer-friendly version
  • The eggs are collected for the purpose of rearing.

  • They are incubated and provided with the right conditions to hatch.

  • The eggs hatch into small black coloured larvae.

  • The bamboo trays are used for transporting and storing the larvae.

  • Once they hatch, they feed on mulberry leaves and reach maturation.

  • The diseased worms are manually exterminated with the help of a skilled eye.

  • After attaining full growth in the final instar, the worms cease to feed and are ready to spin.

  • The mature larvae are then transported to the mountage for further mounting.

  • These worms have to be picked up and transferred to a mountage for spinning cocoons.

  • Mountages should be kept in shade in a well ventilated place during spinning.

  • The silkworms complete spinning in 48 to 72 but the cocoons should not be harvested at this time as the worms inside are still in pre-pupal stage.

  • The cocoon can now be transported for silk reeling and twisting.

The eggs are collected for the purpose of rearing.

They are incubated and provided with the right conditions to hatch.

The eggs hatch into small black coloured larvae.

The bamboo trays are used for transporting and storing the larvae.

Once they hatch, they feed on mulberry leaves and reach maturation.

The diseased worms are manually exterminated with the help of a skilled eye.

After attaining full growth in the final instar, the worms cease to feed and are ready to spin.

The mature larvae are then transported to the mountage for further mounting.

These worms have to be picked up and transferred to a mountage for spinning cocoons.

Mountages should be kept in shade in a well ventilated place during spinning.

The silkworms complete spinning in 48 to 72 but the cocoons should not be harvested at this time as the worms inside are still in pre-pupal stage.

The cocoon can now be transported for silk reeling and twisting.

Sericulture, or silk farming, is the rearing of silkworms for the production of raw silk. Silkworm larvae are fed mulberry leaves, and, after the fourth molt, climb a twig placed near them and spin their silken cocoons. The silk is a continuous-filament fiber consisting of fibroin protein. Single filaments are combined to form thread. This thread is drawn under tension through several guides and wound onto reels. The threads may be plied together to form yarn. After drying the raw silk is packed according to quality.

The silk moth lays eggs. When the eggs hatch, the caterpillars are fed mulberry leaves. When the silkworms are about 25 days old, they are 10,000 times heavier than when they hatched. They are now ready to spin a silk cocoon. The silk is produced in two glands in the silkworm's head and then forced out in the liquid form. The silk solidifies when it comes in contact with the air. The silkworm spins approximately 1 mile of filament and completely encloses itself in a cocoon in about two or three days, but due to quality restrictions, the amount of usable silk in each cocoon is small. The silk is obtained from the undamaged cocoons by brushing the cocoon to find the outside end of the filament.

For more details:
https://dsource.in/resource/cocoon-formation
 

The eggs are collected for the purpose of rearing.

They are incubated and provided with the right conditions to hatch.

The eggs hatch into small black coloured larvae.

The bamboo trays are used for transporting and storing the larvae.

Once they hatch, they feed on mulberry leaves and reach maturation.

The diseased worms are manually exterminated with the help of a skilled eye.

After attaining full growth in the final instar, the worms cease to feed and are ready to spin.

The mature larvae are then transported to the mountage for further mounting.

These worms have to be picked up and transferred to a mountage for spinning cocoons.

Mountages should be kept in shade in a well ventilated place during spinning.

The silkworms complete spinning in 48 to 72 but the cocoons should not be harvested at this time as the worms inside are still in pre-pupal stage.

The cocoon can now be transported for silk reeling and twisting.


Creating Digital-learning Environment for Design



  • Courses
  • Resources
  • Case study
  • Showcase
  • Tools
  • Gallery
  • Videos
  • Animation Design
  • Communication Design
  • Design Fundamentals
  • Interaction Design
  • Product Design
  • Tools for Design
  • Open Design
  • Contribute to our Dsource
  • About
  • People
  • Events
  • Job@D'source
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Download App
  • YouTube
  • Facebook
  • Twitter

Indian Language
English Bangali Gujarati Hindi
Kannada Malayalam Marathi Punjabi
Sindhi Tamil Telugu Urdu