Insect
Unit
In Miss Stetson’s 2nd
grade classroom we have been learning a lot about insects. The newest members
of our classroom include 200 meal worms, 25 crickets, 50 wax worms, 8 painted
lady caterpillars, 50 milk weed bugs, and a praying mantis egg. Our classroom
is completed “BUGGED OUT.”
Meal worms:
I found a link on Pinterest
while I was looking up activities about meal worms. The habitat was a 3 tiered
housing unit for the meal worms. I found
this much more visually appealing for the times we were not observing the
meal worms. The unit has 3 layers and cost me about $20.00 total since I had
some of the materials at home.
The top layer houses the adult
meal worms. I put wheat bran and old fashioned oats for the adult meal worms to
eat. I also put an old egg carton ripped up for the meal worms to climb and hid
under. (They love to hide) They will begin to mate in this section and their eggs
will drop into the middle layer.
The Middle Layer
The middle layer houses the
pupa and eggs. I call this the resting chambers. I learned the hard way that
too much handling can cause harm to the mealworm pupa. When the eggs hatch (9-20
days) the bran will begin to move little that is how you know you have baby
meal worms. I did keep a fresh apple in this layer in case over the weekend any
eggs hatch or meal worms transform into their final stage.
The Bottom Layer
The bottom layer was my
classroom’s favorite layer. It was filled with 200 meal worms. I put cut up
apples in the drawer on for the meal worms to drink. If the bran starts to look
like sand it is time to change the bran. (The meal worm droppings are great food
for your plants) Every morning I assigned a student to go through the bottom
layer to look for pupa to put into the middle layer.
Benefits to this system
I found it was much cleaner
and I did not get grossed out having worms open for the class to see. The
students looked forward to watching the entire life cycle of the meal worms and
enjoyed searching for them. We had some causality in our meal worm container,
but they learned this sometimes happens for no reason. We even once caught the adults “playing” aka
mating in our habitat. It will take the meal worm about 1-4 days to begin laying
eggs.
Cons to the System
I found out that if you put
the mesh on top of the drawer that a meal worm may get stuck underneath the
mesh. I had to remake the liner only once to get it to work. I hot glued it
underneath. It did make it stick a little but it kept the meal worms safe. I
also found that opening the top drawer sometimes makes a mess. So I would open
the middle and top together or put a plate underneath habitat for the bran to
fall on.
After the Unit
I have a student who has many
chickens. I am donating the habitat to his chickens since I have had many
delicious eggs this school year.
We really enjoy this habitat and I hope your student
do as well.
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