Yes, it is as a result of drinking boiled soup person, can treat many diseases, such as snake bites.Wow, lingonlei, what do people do with all those pedes there? I've heard of the fish bait idea, but what else? Are they dried and then people eat them?
I agree with your point of view.Albinoism is not a "colorform". It is a recessive genetic trait.
Sorry, I really don't know what should use words to express: people raised the centipede.I don't see any signs of breeding. That just looks like a bunch of stockpiled pedes. Where are the breeding and young rearing enclosures?
Do the farmers capture the centipedes from the wild and bring them to the farm or do they reproduce them there? If they reproduce them there where do they raise the babies?Sorry, I really don't know what should use words to express: people raised the centipede.
But the centipede is really farmers themselves feeding and breeding.
Farmers in the field to capture the centipede, after a farm raised their ecological environment construction, the centipede in this environment, mating, reproductive growth.Do the farmers capture the centipedes from the wild and bring them to the farm or do they reproduce them there? If they reproduce them there where do they raise the babies?
Thanks for sharing, this is very interesting.
Maybe I have a problem, the expression is usually make medicine mechapedes to use. Medicine is generally need soluble in water, so I'll say soup.It sounds like a piece of property is made to be "centipede friendly" so many stay on the property and breed?, then they collect them from the property? If that's it, I guess it would be a centipede farm(?), I'm still not sure how it works though. So do people eat centipede soup for the taste and not only to treat a disease? Thanks for posting those pics, that's a lot of pedes!!
Uh, no. The character "farm" in the Chinese language means "farm" in English.Hmmm, I wonder if there is just a Chinese to English translation thing going on here when it comes to using some words, ...like "farm".
Haha to be honest I've pretty much forgotten. Though I do know "farming" in Chinese also means "cultivation", so yes, the pedes are being bred and raised on the farms, not caught and simply stored there.I'm curious, what's the Chinese word for "farm" in Chinese, hard to to without audio I guess. I was wondering if the Chinese word for it includes taking care of animals and not just raising and reproducing them. There is a problem with translations sometimes when that's the case, not that it's the case here though.
I've no idea. But I think what people tend to forget is that this is a very communal species. Given the massive number of generations in which these centipedes have been in constant contact with one another, maybe they have "learned", genetically, not to eat each other's eggs, in order to sustain their own numbers (just throwing out a hypothesis here, genetics experts, don't blast me)? I will be testing this theory if one of mine lays eggs. I'll leave her in the communal enclosure with 5 other centipedes and I'll see what happens.So is some land set up for that species somehow, so they prefer to be there and breed? I think this is what most people are wondering.