How Japanese Farming Million of SilkWorm for silk - Silk cocoon harvest and process in Factory

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  • Опубликовано: 10 окт 2022
  • Japanese silk is silk harvested in Japan. The silk industry was dominant from the 1930s to 1950s, but is less common now. Silk is a natural protein fiber, some forms of which can be woven into textiles. The protein fiber of silk is composed mainly of fibroin and is produced by certain insect larvae to form cocoons.The best-known silk is obtained from the cocoons of the larvae of the mulberry silkworm.
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Комментарии • 3,7 тыс.

  • @NoalFarm2020
    @NoalFarm2020  Год назад +213

    And please support Noal farm by watching more videos here:
    ruclips.net/p/PLE1jI5UQXjDzuce-_PzXky5rpGU_hEMmL
    For US audiences interested in Reddit Cheating Wife Story
    ruclips.net/p/PLJ16F2k0UkC0GYn-0hJxlrnyCw3lgGgax

  • @rockvillemmf
    @rockvillemmf Год назад +405

    Great video! I lived for several years in Tokyo in the early 1970s, and often in my spare time I visited my uncle and aunt in Fukushima. They farmed fruit and rice primarily, but in the off season raised silkworms. It was a small one-family operation with no mechanization as in this video. In watching and helping them, I learned that silk farming is hard work and requires dedication and stamina. Those little buggers don't stop eating when the humans want to sleep. If you neglect them they will die or become diseased and unable to produce healthy cocoons. Full time farming continues to decline in Japan as young educated men and women seek cleaner, safer, higher paying jobs with set hours in the cities. Hats off to the farmers--they are the salt of the earth.

    • @dove3853
      @dove3853 Год назад +7

      Remember that the Lord Jesus Christ died on a cross for you because He loves you so much. He then rose up from the dead three days later
      The Ten Commandments are called the moral law, (most of us are lying thieving blasphemous adulterer at heart and deserve hell) you and I broke the law, Jesus paid the fine. That’s what happened on that cross.
      By believing that Jesus died on the cross and rose up from the dead 3 days later and not just confessing your sin, but also repenting of all sin you have done and putting all your trust in Him in prayer, He will grant you everlasting life as a free Gift.

    • @chuckbowman1266
      @chuckbowman1266 Год назад +5

      You forgot to mention baptism. Without the blood there is no remission of sins. When you believe well you become as good as satan he also believes. Belief or faith is justified by works. Not that a man should boast its still a free gift but we require washing. Except a man be born again he will not see the kingdom of God. All of the examples we see of salvation are preceeded by baptism, except the thief on the cross ( Jesus had power on earth to forgive sin) whom Christ accepted in that way

    • @1q-wer1q-wer73
      @1q-wer1q-wer73 Год назад +7

      абсолютно соглашусь, сельские труженики - это соль земли. если поучаствовал, помог им - и на всю жизнь запомнишь, что это красиво, интересно, познавательно, но требует каждодневного труда, знаний, навыков, терпения и упорства. большое уважение к этим людям

    • @HOrtiz969
      @HOrtiz969 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@dove3853 christ and god dont exist. They are Alive only on your mind, catolicism and religions are made for weak people Who cant deal with the life dificultys and problems and for feel acepted for others , just a colective paranoia with 2000 yo/4.500.000.000 years that earth exist . One of the 7872 religions actives currently in the world. If god exist anywhere , he feel very ashamed from you , cause youve been traped in a no-sense religión random . A true god Will disapoint you and all belivers cause 0 brain .

    • @MG-Farm
      @MG-Farm 9 месяцев назад +1

      Right. It's a great video

  • @KiranKumar-cg3yg
    @KiranKumar-cg3yg 7 месяцев назад +50

    Hats off to the engineers who designed end to end process and built the machinary.

  • @Reality_slaps
    @Reality_slaps Год назад +21

    I personally had experienced this silkworm farming . Basically,here in our Village, my maternal uncle runs a industrial revolution on this silkworm farming. It's so hard working. Here,in our India, it's all done by ourselves in hand without using this kind of technology.

  • @sheetal2637
    @sheetal2637 9 месяцев назад

    That is an interesting procedure .I want to visit physically to see the entire process .

  • @user-bo6sw6zu2r
    @user-bo6sw6zu2r Год назад +7

    ขั้นตอนการทำเลียนมาจากสมัยโบราณทุกอย่าง เพียงแต่นำวิทยาการสมัยใหม่เข้ามาช่วยในการผลิตได้มากขึ้น เบาแรงและทันสมัยขึ้น สมัยเด็กเคยช่วยแม่เลี้ยงหม่อนและดูแม่สาวไหม ดูแล้วชื่นใจมากค่ะ

  • @Thekingofallpumpkins
    @Thekingofallpumpkins Год назад +777

    The young silkworm had always dreamed of the day when it would be chosen to go to the special place where all the big silkworms went. It was a right of passage among its kind, and those who were selected were considered highly venerated.
    So when the day finally arrived and the young silkworm was chosen, it couldn't contain its excitement. It was fed and fed, growing ever larger and stronger until it knew that it was time to spin its cocoon and begin the transformation into a moth.
    As the young silkworm drifted into a deep sleep within the cocoon, it couldn't have possibly known the horror that awaited it. It was only when the cocoon was ripped away and the silkworm was thrown into a boiling pot of water that it realized the true nature of its fate.
    The young silkworm writhed and struggled in agony as it was boiled alive, its body and wings never to fully develop. And as its life came to an end, its last thoughts were of fear and sorrow for the future generation of silkworms who would suffer the same fate.
    The young silkworm had been tricked, its dreams of becoming a majestic moth shattered in the cruel world of the silk harvesting factory. It was a harsh reminder of the harsh realities of life, and a cautionary tale for all those who dared to hope for something more.

    • @businessbuildermax3142
      @businessbuildermax3142 Год назад +53

      Well said 👏🏾 please right the sequel and send me an invite when you make this a movie 🎬

    • @danellis7718
      @danellis7718 Год назад +58

      However, they are then shipped to South Korea for snacks. I'm not kidding. They love them in Korea.

    • @lucasbayout195
      @lucasbayout195 Год назад +5

      hhahahahahaha amazing storytelling skills

    • @a-ex1018
      @a-ex1018 Год назад +3

      @@lucasbayout195 well said man well said 😖

    • @BabyMango
      @BabyMango Год назад +21

      Sad and true :(

  • @elmirsi
    @elmirsi 7 месяцев назад +5

    Super. Dzięki za poszerzenie wiedzy ❤ . Nie znałam się. Żywienie gąsienic 😊

  • @frankordonez2826
    @frankordonez2826 8 месяцев назад

    Thats so amazing great worm job so natural and so organic mother nature its so unique❤

    • @catalina5382
      @catalina5382 6 месяцев назад

      what's natural about it? these animals are being boiled alive and never get to morph and fly as nature intended

  • @cjfredi
    @cjfredi Год назад +9

    Wow! What a process. Amazing.

  • @MsValiG
    @MsValiG Год назад +8

    OMG, I learned this in school in the 90s. Of course, all by hand with mulberry leaves. The moth is super cute

  • @brentmagerowski7948
    @brentmagerowski7948 6 месяцев назад +10

    One of the most amazing process’ I’ve ever seen.
    Factories always seem to impress me to think someone designed that

  • @monicamichelle2391
    @monicamichelle2391 Год назад +147

    I used to joke about wanting to get silk worms, so I could harvest the silk. I knew that there was a process to this, but I have an entire new appreciation for all the hard work that goes into getting such a beautiful product ♥️ 🐛

    • @xxmemekipxxlastname4846
      @xxmemekipxxlastname4846 7 месяцев назад +4

      yeah torture the worms!!!

    • @Kalumbatsch
      @Kalumbatsch 6 месяцев назад +5

      It's so beautiful, after they've done all the work for you and are ready to take off and fly, they get boiled alive.

    • @hiimryan2388
      @hiimryan2388 5 месяцев назад

      @@xxmemekipxxlastname4846grow up

    • @oldfarmer112
      @oldfarmer112 3 месяца назад +1

      Do you really find it worth it?

    • @monicamichelle2391
      @monicamichelle2391 3 месяца назад +1

      So cute people in the comments acting like they've never owned a piece of silk 🤣

  • @bretnielsen5502
    @bretnielsen5502 Год назад +24

    I look forward to your presentations ! Always an interesting learning experience.

  • @yasirarfath5083
    @yasirarfath5083 Год назад +2

    The process is more neat and clean. Very impressive 👏👏👏

  • @user-vp6fg9ti1l
    @user-vp6fg9ti1l 8 месяцев назад +3

    Чудеса да и только!

  • @thebeautyofnatureandanimal1771
    @thebeautyofnatureandanimal1771 Год назад +15

    This is truly amazing to watch. It’s incredible how somebody figured out how to do this process.

    • @leeli7986
      @leeli7986 Год назад +1

      It's Chinese technique.

    • @sunsetpark_fpv
      @sunsetpark_fpv 8 месяцев назад

      That is the most fascinating part - humanity figured this out and turned it into an industry, and its just amazing, the entire process.

  • @gauravjoseph4831
    @gauravjoseph4831 Год назад +17

    Japanese manufacturing is amazing, fine tuned for efficiency and productivity. I have never seen machines for this industry.

    • @The-Real-Spaniard
      @The-Real-Spaniard Год назад

      @Christos Paschalidis what about the animals that have died to feed you and clothed you, you hypocrite next time think before you make a fool of yourself self with a silly comment

    • @cheddarsunchipsyes8144
      @cheddarsunchipsyes8144 Год назад

      @Christos Paschalidis delicious 🤭

    • @The-Real-Spaniard
      @The-Real-Spaniard Год назад

      @Christos Paschalidis vegans you say lol hypocrites I call them as they say that they don't eat lifeforms here's a newsflash plants are alive and the communicate via Mycelium network and Mycorrhizal networks look it up also are you telling us that all you wear is cotton and hemp as they're the only natural fibres that don't come from animals and are your seats that you sit on vinyl or plastic as leather comes from animals so before you try and say something silly do your research just because you do not consume animal meat doesn't mean that you don't depend on animals

    • @The-Real-Spaniard
      @The-Real-Spaniard Год назад +1

      @Christos Paschalidis I forgot as I have just schooled you on how plants communicate let me know what your thoughts are I'm curious to know what your thoughts are on the matter

    • @The-Real-Spaniard
      @The-Real-Spaniard Год назад +1

      I'm not in here to argue but I call it like I see it ( in this case like I read it ) and bottom line you got on your soapbox and stated that you don't consume animals because it's cruel but I believe that I proved you wrong as animals are used for alot more than just food, good to see that you have done some research but everything you said I was already aware of it and it's speculation not fact, this forum is for different options as you and I, that said before you state that you're a vegan because you don't consume animals it does not mean that other parts of your life doesn't depend on animals, even the device you use to write these messages has impacted nature animals think hard about that. Not trying to be rude I'm pragmatic person and people ( not saying you ) that march against let's say mining with the banners I laugh at them because the clothes they wear the food they eat it's all because of diesel in the trucks and tractors that are needed to process the food or clothes and diesel is needed to deliver the food to the shops and where does diesel come from, I bet they all have a mobile device that needs alot of minerals that need to be mined to make the batteries and what is plastic made from oh that's right crude oil so for someone to live without any of today's luxuries would need to live like mankind did about 300 years ago before the industrial revolution. I do want to end by saying that my messages to you are not personal it's just me been me pragmatic realistic factional not fictional and please if you're going to reply please don't use Yo or Bro I have a name and it's on my profile thank you

  • @glow1815
    @glow1815 Год назад +6

    Fascinating I never knew how silk are made. Awesome video!

    • @dove3853
      @dove3853 Год назад

      Remember that the Lord Jesus Christ died on a cross for you because He loves you so much. He then rose up from the dead three days later
      The Ten Commandments are called the moral law, (most of us are lying thieving blasphemous adulterer at heart and deserve hell) you and I broke the law, Jesus paid the fine. That’s what happened on that cross.
      By believing that Jesus died on the cross and rose up from the dead 3 days later and not just confessing your sin, but also repenting of all sin you have done and putting all your trust in Him in prayer, He will grant you everlasting life as a free Gift.

  • @wizzardofpaws2420
    @wizzardofpaws2420 Год назад +64

    It really makes you wonder who was the first person to think of this? to see a worm and imagine it would make the most beautiful garments in all of history? It's an awful lot of work and takes a long time. It's just amazing.

    • @kevindunlap5525
      @kevindunlap5525 Год назад +11

      Who ate the first crab? Who suffered the first fugu? Who sliced the first maple or rubber tree? It's wild.

    • @flyingfrog7847
      @flyingfrog7847 11 месяцев назад

      @Kevin Dunlap shut up Kevin

    • @samalaimukhametova7290
      @samalaimukhametova7290 10 месяцев назад

      ruclips.net/video/b9aYAJvhjtM/видео.html

    • @soggyfroggy22
      @soggyfroggy22 6 месяцев назад +2

      Or honey from a beehive!?

    • @kylegilbert5234
      @kylegilbert5234 5 месяцев назад +3

      @@kevindunlap5525 The person who ate the first crab was likely the first one to survive being eaten by a crab.

  • @azamyahmad
    @azamyahmad Год назад +4

    As always beautiful upload thanks for sharing keep it Up 👍

  • @user-uk6pn4ur5i
    @user-uk6pn4ur5i Год назад +5

    من العراق تحياتي
    عمل متقن وجدية تامة بالعمل احسنتم.

  • @jiezhao8779
    @jiezhao8779 Год назад +1

    my mom fed the silkworm before ...this job really is the toughest of farming ...especially the prepared the food for them😀 salute to every farming worker.

  • @learnmauritiancreole9337
    @learnmauritiancreole9337 9 месяцев назад +2

    I will never complain of the price of silk made products as from now.. this takes so much of labour...

  • @PaceVali
    @PaceVali Год назад +40

    Every time I see all these animals being farmed. It only makes me think that humans are also being farmed as well. We just don't know it the same way they don't know it.

    • @anamak2000
      @anamak2000 Год назад +2

      I love your comment. Great keep going

    • @GamerGhostDude
      @GamerGhostDude Год назад

      I thought turkey had the largest in the world for farming silk worms

    • @jungleno.
      @jungleno. Год назад +1

      Soylent green. If you don’t understand, watch the movie by the same name

    • @PaceVali
      @PaceVali Год назад

      @@jungleno. lol its humans

    • @estebancorral5151
      @estebancorral5151 3 месяца назад

      @@jungleno.it comes from Plankton fro the Sea.

  • @kharezmi7772
    @kharezmi7772 Год назад +15

    20 лет наша семья вырашивали шелкопряд, адский труд, но в то время платили хорошо, окупалось. Привет из Узбекистана!

  • @francoisemartin9648
    @francoisemartin9648 Год назад +1

    Extraordinaire reportage sur la culture du vers à soie dans une propreté qu'ils méritent avec un beau savoir faire dans cette délicatesse soyeuse,merci🤩🤩😍

  • @ylimeri
    @ylimeri Год назад +8

    Это гениально 🔥 и очень сложный процесс,требующий исключительно человеческих рук и усилий 👍✊

    • @MaxSergeev-xq2bw
      @MaxSergeev-xq2bw Год назад +1

      недаром носовой платок из натурального шелка может стоить и 500, и 1000 долларов... :))))

  • @yurik198656
    @yurik198656 Год назад +10

    Я всегда смотрю такие видео и вспоминаю фильм Скайлайн и Восхождение Юпитер. Всё живое это биоресурс, в грамотных руках.

  • @user-qx3cs8jw7g
    @user-qx3cs8jw7g Год назад +17

    Потрясающе! Я в восторге!
    спасибо за видео!

    • @user-cp8zc2xc7z
      @user-cp8zc2xc7z Год назад

      Я не понял, а куда гусеница делась ?

    • @lifebigslifebigs4336
      @lifebigslifebigs4336 Год назад

      @@user-cp8zc2xc7z , она отдала себя полностью без остатка этому процессу...

    • @SilverKATrin
      @SilverKATrin Год назад

      @@user-cp8zc2xc7z выбросили

    • @Dmitriy61
      @Dmitriy61 Год назад +1

      @@user-cp8zc2xc7z Сварилась в кипятке. А кокон пошёл на нитки.

    • @user-jw6my8gd4b
      @user-jw6my8gd4b Год назад

      @@Dmitriy61 ОНИ ПРИДУМАЮТ, ЧТО ДЕЛАТЬ С ЭТИМИ ОТВАРНЫМИ ГУСЕНИЦАМИ ! ? БЕЛОК ОДНАКО , , ,

  • @user-yi7jr1tj3d
    @user-yi7jr1tj3d 8 месяцев назад +3

    О боже, сколько мы их в школе на каникулах выращивали а потом проработала на шелкомотальной фабрике 30 лет! Из этого кокона будет натуральный шелк! ❤

    • @DOH_TAXNOH_FAHTACTN4ECKN_TVARN
      @DOH_TAXNOH_FAHTACTN4ECKN_TVARN 8 месяцев назад +1

      я так и не понял куда сам шелкопряд девается? Когда коконы замочили вместе с шелкопрядами?

    • @kriegsolider5268
      @kriegsolider5268 2 месяца назад

      Убивают@@DOH_TAXNOH_FAHTACTN4ECKN_TVARN

  • @analivebonilla9447
    @analivebonilla9447 Год назад +14

    Es extraordinario. Estoy impresionada con tanto trabajo. Tantas personas realizando algo tan hermoso. Felicidades a todos. Un saludo desde Costa Rica.

  • @sjbkhanakhajana9721
    @sjbkhanakhajana9721 Год назад +3

    Wow beautiful sharing 👍🏻

  • @chen-py7bs
    @chen-py7bs Год назад +4

    Hight quality silk cocoon. 👍

  • @dustbunnieboo
    @dustbunnieboo Год назад +58

    Very interesting process. I've seen silk made from the cocoons after the moths emerged. That seems like a logical and cost effective way since you'd have the next generation of silk worms from these new moths. 🐛💕

    • @wongtan5680
      @wongtan5680 Год назад +17

      Exactly that makes so much more sense as oppose to having to cook the cocoons alive

    • @georgiaw6554
      @georgiaw6554 11 месяцев назад +43

      when the silk worms escape from the cocoon they secrete a substance that breaks the fibers and discolors the silk. that silk can still be used but it is much lower quality and not as profitable, it’s often used for stuffing in jackets, etc.

    • @mbern4530
      @mbern4530 9 месяцев назад +2

      @@georgiaw6554 But silk is always dyed, would the discolouring have an effect on the colours?

    • @rockmcdwayne1710
      @rockmcdwayne1710 9 месяцев назад +27

      @@mbern4530 ''Breaks the fibers'' is a key word here. Its poor quality, not as strong as good silk.

    • @ohno7582
      @ohno7582 7 месяцев назад

      Environmentalist p*ssies everywhere. To live is to kill.

  • @CJ-jl6hf
    @CJ-jl6hf Год назад +18

    I love how clean Japan is, even these work environments are clean and tidy, amazing!

    • @SMGJohn
      @SMGJohn 6 месяцев назад +1

      It is as clean as they want you to see, but Japan can be an untidy disaster just like any place in the world.
      As there saying in Japan, brush dirt under carpet before arrival of guests.

    • @jules263
      @jules263 5 месяцев назад +3

      Let’s glide over the part where over half the country is radioactive and is located in the ring of fire. Learn some history 😂

  • @ebnakano
    @ebnakano Год назад +33

    Muito bom este video de todo o processo do fio de seda. Interessante que a maioria que trabalham desde criação até produção final do fio são idosos acima de 60 anos !!!

    • @Barmaley80x
      @Barmaley80x Год назад +2

      Да вся Япония, это народ 45++. Больших сверхдоходов думаю этот бизнес не принесет, но многих людей обеспечит работой.

    • @helio3906
      @helio3906 Год назад +1

      No JP, a maioria das pessoas que vivem em áreas rurais é idosa e a maioria dos jovens sai da área rural e vai para as cidades.
      É uma triste constatação que já trouxe até queda na produção agricola do país.

    • @luisfuenmayor7088
      @luisfuenmayor7088 Год назад

      Muito bom? Eles matam os animáis q tao dentro do ovo.

    • @helio3906
      @helio3906 Год назад +1

      E dá pra comer carne sem precisar matar os animais?

    • @kitsune1977
      @kitsune1977 Год назад

      @@helio3906 comer é uma necessidade de todo ser vivo. vestir roupas de seda, não...eu vivo muito bem sem elas e vc?

  • @austbrood5828
    @austbrood5828 Год назад

    Respect..This is value of education, lmplementation, discipline and hard work ...Hat off as always to Japaness.

  • @GintaSmite
    @GintaSmite 3 месяца назад

    Thank you for this film! I will show it to design students in a silk painting course in Latvia to teach them respect for the material.

  • @nitdapribula5026
    @nitdapribula5026 Год назад +59

    Amazing my grandma used to raised silk worm but the silk is golden yellow 😊 and she feed them with mulberry leaves as well .

    • @motherlandbot6837
      @motherlandbot6837 Год назад +15

      There are strains of domestic Mulberry Silkworms that spin bright yellow and even orange cocoons. The original ancestral Bombyx mandarina still exists, and spins a white cocoon that is much smaller than that of domestic Mulberry Silkworms.

  • @GS-st9ns
    @GS-st9ns Год назад +32

    This is good information to have. Growing Up in Boston Ma we had a mulberry tree in front of our house. The little silkworms were wiggling in the cocoon. So fascinating. Now I understand more

    • @denisemarie741
      @denisemarie741 Год назад +2

      Fortunately your worms had a normal life unlike those that suffer!!!

    • @jankimmons2114
      @jankimmons2114 Год назад

      The worm/chrysalis is killed when the cocoons are put in the hot water. They aren't allowed to emerge from the cocoon because the cuts the fiber into short pieces instead of the one long fiber. Unfortunate for the worm. Some moths are allowed to develope so they can make more worms.

    • @mehere8038
      @mehere8038 Год назад +1

      @@denisemarie741 hardly! each moth produces around 300 eggs, cause only around 1% will survive to adulthood, the rest will become bird food or die from weather extremes

    • @oguzcan2335
      @oguzcan2335 Год назад

      @@mehere8038 at least they are not boiled and die screaming

    • @mehere8038
      @mehere8038 Год назад

      ​@@oguzcan2335 um silk worms in silk production are boiled at a point in their life cycle where their brain is mush, as they convert in shape from caterpillar to moth. Even IF insects could feel pain or scream at other parts of their life, they most certainly can not while in that metamorphosis! the ones eaten by birds, or sprayed with insecticides, as occurs on mass in cotton production, are going to feel FAR more pain & suffer FAR more than silk worms used for silk production will, again that's IF insects can feel pain.
      Additionally, if they hatch as moths, they then starve to death, which is also a bad way to die isn't it! boys flap themselves to death, or mate with girls, girls are left bleeding from the constant rape by the boys, with the boys using barbs to hold themselves inside the female for up to 24 hours at a time!

  • @AlvaKersher
    @AlvaKersher 8 месяцев назад

    Great video!

  • @cristianzarate3053
    @cristianzarate3053 7 месяцев назад

    Los diseñadores de las maquinas, son unos genios.

  • @yashwaykar9647
    @yashwaykar9647 Год назад +7

    Very smart technology 😍
    I love it. I hope this will come soon in my country.

    • @yashwaykar9647
      @yashwaykar9647 Год назад +2

      @Christos Paschalidis SORRY for that. I am just a traditional sericulture farmer. When I seen the advance technology of sericulture got excited and commented (very smart technology😍 ).
      I didn't thought in that way you think about burning silkworms alive in cocoons,. 🙏🙏

  • @jimlaporta8573
    @jimlaporta8573 Год назад +136

    In my next life, let's hope I come back as something other than a silk worm!

    • @johnrambo1349
      @johnrambo1349 Год назад +1

      Yep you can come back as an earth worm so we can use you for fishing.

    • @cheerubebayonettaholopaine2638
      @cheerubebayonettaholopaine2638 Год назад +26

      a cow in a cowfarm? or a dog in a dogfarm for meat? or wait, a rabbit in a furfarm? name it. same story, different animal 🤗

    • @killollipop
      @killollipop Год назад +5

      @@cheerubebayonettaholopaine2638 cat

    • @metali1378
      @metali1378 Год назад

      Just hope ur not born as ANY animal in china....they kill and eat every living thing.

    • @Leonion6
      @Leonion6 Год назад +8

      @@cheerubebayonettaholopaine2638 , at least cows or rabbits aren't boiled alive.

  • @TevediyaMuindaRachetha
    @TevediyaMuindaRachetha 8 месяцев назад +1

    Japanese the great👍👏😊

  • @okwatever3582
    @okwatever3582 Год назад +2

    I have kept 桑蚕 as pets when I was young. watching them munch on the leaves and seeing them grow up forming cocoon and then moth is a very satisfying observation process

  • @user-yi7jr1tj3d
    @user-yi7jr1tj3d Год назад +4

    Даа! Я знаю что это такое, выращивать их одно а создать натуральный шелк это что то! На шелко мотальной фабиике я проработала почти 30 лет, в Грузии г. Самтредиа! 👍❤️

  • @motherlandbot6837
    @motherlandbot6837 Год назад +126

    This video shows modern sericulture with the domestic Mulberry Silkworm (Bombyx mori), an insect that has over the course of millennia undergone intensive selective breeding to spin a much larger cocoon than its' wild Bombyx mandarina ancestor, a dingy gray moth with a grey caterpillar camouflaged to resemble a twig. Bombyx mandarina is native to China, where domestication of this insect for silk production began under Empress Xi Lingshi some 5,000 years ago. "Mothra", one of my favorite science fiction characters from childhood, is based on the domestic Mulberry Silkworm and Silkmoth.
    In their first stage of growth, both domestic and wild Bombyx caterpillars are fuzzy and black. Both are bird dropping mimics in their second growth stage. From the third stage onwards, the domestic caterpillar is usually mostly stark white with a few brown markings, as a result of selection to more easily monitor the caterpillars. In the wild this would be a death sentence, as birds and other insect eaters would spot them immediately. Domestic Mulberry Silkworms rarely wander when they seek food, but remain in their rearing trays until fresh Mulberry leaves are placed on top of them, while their wild ancestors seek fresh food by crawling along branches like any other tree dwelling leaf eating caterpillar. In keeping with this difference, domestic Mulberry Silkworms have lost the ability to cling tightly to branches or other objects.
    The domestic moth is off white to nearly pure white, unlike its' camouflaged gray ancestor, and has wings too small and flight muscles too weak for any flight. Domestic Mulberry Silkworm moths often fail to expand their wings normally, and specimens with curled up wings are routinely represented as "Poodle Moths", a non existent species of insect! They are completely docile and fearless, and can be kept as short lived pets that neither eat nor drink. Unlike their wild ancestor, the females (very conspicuously) release mating pheremone both day and night, and they will mate anytime, and anywhere (unlike their wild ancestor). Males court females by running around them while beating their wings and releasing male pheremone. After mating, females then deposit their full quota of +200 eggs wherever they happen to be after mating, unlike their wild ancestor, where females fly about at night laying eggs on multiple Mulberry trees. While domestic Western Honeybees are fully capable of life in the wild, domestic Mulberry Silkworms are now completely incapable of living without Human care.
    Both wild and domestic Mulberry Silkmoths lack functional mouthparts and digestive systems, and live to reproduce on the fat they accumulated as caterpillars. Silk is almost pure protein, and the caterpillars accumulate this from their low protein leaf diet to spin their cocoons.
    Wild Mulberry Silkworms overwinter in their egg stage; their embryonic development ceases after a particular stage, and then will not continue unless they are subjected to a period of winter cold to break dormancy. This was true for many older domestic strains of Mulberry Silkworms as well. Most newer strains have no such dormancy requirement, enabling sericultuists to raise 2 or more generations per year. Many of these can still be kept dormant in the egg stage if kept cool after reaching an appropriate stage of embryonic development. Unlike many other moths, both domestic and wild Mulberry Silkmoths do not readily adapt to or survive cold induced dormancy in their pupal stage inside their cocoon.
    In Asia, many other species of wild, semidomestic, and domestic silkmoths are raised for silk. Nearly all of these are members of the Saturniidae (Giant Silkmoths), and are usually native species (or descendants of native species) of the genera Antherea and Samia. These are far larger as both mature caterpillars and as often VERY beautiful adult moths than Bombyx mori and its' wild ancestor, but spin proportionately smaller cocoons.
    Worker allergies are a recurrent problem in sericulture; high efficiency masks, protective clothing, and gloves reduce but do not entirely prevent worker allergenesis. This is also a serious problem for those who like myself, rear(ed) Saturniid and Bombyx moths and caterpillars as an educational hobby.

    • @franciagomez6241
      @franciagomez6241 Год назад +6

      Exelente explicacion 👍

    • @user-rw7fg2gx8l
      @user-rw7fg2gx8l Год назад +3

      Спасибо! Всех вам благ ! Очень интересно !

    • @oluwatobiosotuyi4103
      @oluwatobiosotuyi4103 Год назад +11

      You have actually given a whole letter for publication here. Wow!
      Please I'd like to ask, what happens to the silkmoths after harvesting the silks from the cocoons? Do they die or they are picked out of the cocoons and taken back to repeat the entire process???

    • @motherlandbot6837
      @motherlandbot6837 Год назад +32

      @@oluwatobiosotuyi4103 They are killed in the pupal stage (the transition stage between the silkworm and the silkmoth inside the cocoon) when the cocoons are placed into hot water. This hot water soak also facilitates spinning the silk fiber from the cocoons into silk thread for weaving into silk cloth. The caterpillar glues the silk thread that it releases as it spins its' cocoon into a solid cocoon with an adhesive saliva. Without this, the cocoon would simply be a mass of silk thread that would fall apart and blow away. The hot water breaks down this adhesive so the silk threads can be reeled off the cocoon.
      Silkworm pupae can be eaten by Humans, or fed to poultry, farmed fishes, Hogs, etc. They are very high in fat, because this sustains the pupa and the moth, neither of which can or will eat. After it reaches the end of its' caterpillar stage, a silkworm expels excess body water and stops eating for the rest of its' life. Because of the high fat content of the pupae, this fat quickly spoils (goes rancid) after the pupae are killed. In some areas, the silkworm pupae are cooked and dried for use as food for fishes, poultry, and Hogs, but if they are not very fresh, the fat they contain quickly spoils, and this spoiled fat is harmful to animals that eat them. I've tried eating fried silkworm pupae when living in Thailand, and they taste quite good, but the texture did not appeal to me.
      Silkworms that are chosen for brood stock for the next generation are allowed to develop into moths. Since each female moth lays +200 (sometimes +300) eggs, only a few are needed for breeding. When emerging from its' cocoon, the moth releases an enzyme from its' mouth that weakens and destroys the silk in front of its' face so that it can push its' way out of the cocoon. This ruins the cocoon for use in silk production. Adult silkmoths live only long enough to reproduce and die a few days afterwards. If a female moth cannot attract a male, she will lay infertile eggs after 5 to 8 days (depending on the air temperature), then die a few hours later.

    • @Pawron
      @Pawron Год назад +6

      Amazing information.

  • @April-dq8jf
    @April-dq8jf Год назад +49

    Какой сложны и трудоёмкий процесс! Теперь понятно почему натуральный шёлк такой дорогой.

    • @ndx5854
      @ndx5854 Год назад

      можешь в шахту спуститься.. или на нефтяные вышки пойти..... там полегче будет

  • @amazingitsmade
    @amazingitsmade Год назад +2

    Great job from Japanese👍👍

  • @quelindoplants7703
    @quelindoplants7703 Год назад +32

    That's an insane process. Can't believe someone figured out how to extract the delicate thread from the cocoon using a machine, since silk was traditionally carefully made by hand!

    • @SMGJohn
      @SMGJohn 6 месяцев назад

      Thousands of years of progress, hundreds of generations at work here, this is peak accumulation of human progress. North Korea have completely automated silk farms its ridicules how even this process can be further automated, I pay top dollar to get in there to see the process, China also has some automated silk farms.

  • @user-oz4ti3ym3r
    @user-oz4ti3ym3r Год назад +8

    Главное оценить человеческий труд в Узбекистане тоже есть производство но у них ещё тяжелее выращивать шелк ,с ними они ухаживают круглосуточно чтоб получить высшего шелка в Японии хорошо что техники очень развити

  • @user-cy9sg2gg5w
    @user-cy9sg2gg5w Год назад +19

    В СССР и в Дагестане так выращивали ..
    Были полки с гусеницы и их кормили листьями тутового дерева. .
    Ещё тутовник называют Шелковица

    • @batyralievaa
      @batyralievaa Год назад

      А они потом в коканах умирают? От обработки?

    • @user-cy9sg2gg5w
      @user-cy9sg2gg5w Год назад +1

      @@batyralievaa кокон белоснежный шёлк..делают нитки

  • @screwsnutsandbolts
    @screwsnutsandbolts Год назад

    Amazing process ! 👍

  • @hanifbashir745
    @hanifbashir745 Год назад +1

    Very much informative....
    Million thanks 😊 🙏

  • @claudetesilvahenrique1580
    @claudetesilvahenrique1580 Год назад +18

    Que coisa fantástica,, fazendo a produção em grande escala .

  • @dddance1442
    @dddance1442 Год назад +11

    Эх японцы какие они все таки молодцы,трудоголики.Все чисто и аккуратно 👍

  • @DubaiHandsome
    @DubaiHandsome Год назад

    Clean, systematic and clever process

  • @Nizati
    @Nizati Год назад +10

    Very cool. I imagine that some silkworms are held back to become moths to start to process over too. Wonder how they choose those ones?

    • @ezaf5989
      @ezaf5989 5 месяцев назад +2

      Grown adult with an anime child pfp is crazy seek help

    • @hiimryan2388
      @hiimryan2388 5 месяцев назад +1

      The ones with the best cacoon are left to breed! This is kinda how we got most domesticated animals

  • @CheviMuzicGroup
    @CheviMuzicGroup Год назад +214

    I’m sure I missed something but where did the worm go? Is he still in the silk Cocoon?

    • @Vimalkumar-ro9to
      @Vimalkumar-ro9to Год назад +146

      The worm is boiled while it's inside the cocoon. If it hatch out it breaks the silk thread so it's boiled alive.

    • @user-pi8ho1dc6i
      @user-pi8ho1dc6i Год назад +25

      @@Vimalkumar-ro9to 😱

    • @itsvan5791
      @itsvan5791 Год назад +36

      They are in the chicken belly and sooner later it goes to your belly that's how farm works.

    • @CheviMuzicGroup
      @CheviMuzicGroup Год назад +9

      @@itsvan5791 too bad I don’t eat chicken I wouldn’t know

    • @itsvan5791
      @itsvan5791 Год назад +30

      @@CheviMuzicGroup well mostly it becomes powdered protein either it become food, poultry feed, fish pellet, cosmetic, gym supplement, medicines, or fertilizer we never know but I'm sure it's too valuable to be dumped in the trash can, it's like brown gold for the farmer.

  • @jhyacinthocorner2269
    @jhyacinthocorner2269 Год назад +9

    Amazing job! Love to visit a factory to see the process

  • @laura98listru
    @laura98listru Год назад +1

    Pure asian process! Respect! Such work!!!!!!!

  • @cidaliabaetasimplesmentebe1732

    Very educational and Beautiful process with lots work involved.

  • @erichwilliams8756
    @erichwilliams8756 Год назад +12

    Absolutely awesome and amazing to see what we can do.

  • @ErikBramsen
    @ErikBramsen Год назад +3

    Great video, thanks!

  • @paulinuschah2099
    @paulinuschah2099 Год назад

    No word to describe this out-of-the-world engineering, biomechanical engineering.

  • @carmenfigueroacadefib4100
    @carmenfigueroacadefib4100 Год назад +2

    Guaooo, es increíble todo el proceso que lleva este trabajo de sacar Seda, mí admiración y felicitaciones 🇨🇴👏👍 Nunca había visto algo así. Gracias por compartir

  • @sureyaashraf8588
    @sureyaashraf8588 Год назад +22

    Вспомнила Узбекистан как по дворам ходили и собирали в школьные годы.Как было здорово!! Жили дружно, мирно!!!

  • @Bear-Power-Pup
    @Bear-Power-Pup 6 месяцев назад

    The farm is clearer then my house! love Japan

  • @trinity2145
    @trinity2145 Год назад

    Wow. That’s impressive. Amazing work.

  • @kazahchannel
    @kazahchannel Год назад +55

    Silkworm thread is high quality thread with a very complicated and extra careful manufacturing process

  • @tacticalveterinarian
    @tacticalveterinarian Год назад +23

    Fascinating video!! Silkworms are also breed in the USA to feed a variety of birds, pocket pets and exotic like reptiles, amphibians and invertebrates. They make very nutritious treats!

    • @khaninayath
      @khaninayath Год назад +1

      Yes, we do dry them in Owens and used as a source of high protein for fish feeds, poultry and also can be used in making fish baits, they smell too good if we dry them under hygeine conditions

    • @maecarpenter6735
      @maecarpenter6735 Год назад +1

      Is this called mealworms here?

    • @khaninayath
      @khaninayath Год назад

      @@maecarpenter6735 mealworm is different

    • @ezradja
      @ezradja Год назад

      East Asians eat the silkworms as rare delicacies.

    • @khaninayath
      @khaninayath Год назад

      @@ezradja yes, in Vietnam, southa Korea, china and norteastern provinces of India

  • @sourabhg1599
    @sourabhg1599 4 месяца назад

    Wow, it's nature and I love it ❤

  • @psychologicalmusic168
    @psychologicalmusic168 Год назад

    So Amazing produce, Thank you so much for sharing

  • @mariominarini4850
    @mariominarini4850 Год назад +6

    Do Brasil . Trabalho minucioso muinto interessante

  • @eastcowboy263
    @eastcowboy263 Год назад +3

    Wow great to see

  • @shireeniqbal957
    @shireeniqbal957 4 месяца назад

    Wow 😮 amazing and hardworking process it's truly informative thanks 👍👍👍🤩🤩🤩🥰🥰🥰

  • @maribelllamelo797
    @maribelllamelo797 Год назад +33

    What an amazing process,thanks for sharing

    • @y_zass
      @y_zass Год назад +1

      What was your favorite part? Watching all the worms drown?

    • @RockOnRover
      @RockOnRover Год назад

      ruclips.net/video/GhYrwkGdERw/видео.html

    • @OppaiSlayer
      @OppaiSlayer Год назад +3

      @@y_zass so what?

    • @MononokeSLAYER
      @MononokeSLAYER Год назад +2

      @@y_zass that's my favorite

    • @y_zass
      @y_zass Год назад

      @@OppaiSlayer Imagine if someone drowned you to take all you had... poor 🐛🪱

  • @vml_tec
    @vml_tec Год назад +32

    How much effort, hard work and process they put just to make silk. Life is not magic.

    • @prophez23
      @prophez23 Год назад

      Life is indeed magic. Ritual magic..

    • @VerifyTheTruth
      @VerifyTheTruth Год назад

      Life Is Both Magic And Majestic.

    • @asamiyashin444
      @asamiyashin444 Год назад +3

      And abusing creatures. To me this is despicable.

    • @michaelhunt6019
      @michaelhunt6019 Год назад +3

      Life is magic, commercialism of life is not.

    • @shro_okee
      @shro_okee Год назад +3

      Yeah, unnecessary effort, nobody needs silk and these worms are boiled alive for no reason

  • @SUGAs_Shadow85
    @SUGAs_Shadow85 4 месяца назад

    Wow...what an amazing video. Something you wonder about, but then kind of forget to research.

  • @Nyck461
    @Nyck461 Год назад +11

    Fantastic process. From beginning to end it is a state of art how silk is made. They work in a fast pace and with a very close attention to the job.

    • @mariemaier5630
      @mariemaier5630 10 месяцев назад +1

      Its actually pretty sadistic to deliberately hurry so many insects for greed

  • @ssomova5239
    @ssomova5239 Год назад +7

    Круто! А, мы в советское время растили шелкопряда, сами листья собирали с деревьев шелковицы. Потом коконы сдавали на фабрику. Интересное дело!

    • @user-js5sx8ji3k
      @user-js5sx8ji3k Год назад +4

      Я тоже в школе в Ставропольском крае на летних каникулах этим подрабатывал,они жрут как крокодилы!

    • @ssomova5239
      @ssomova5239 Год назад +2

      @@user-js5sx8ji3k точно!
      Хруст стоит как по снегу бегают

  • @JoseRodriguez-db5tt
    @JoseRodriguez-db5tt Год назад +18

    A seda do Japão foi vestimenta de rico, pelo seu alto valor, leveza, beleza e saudável, poucos tinham o privilégio de usar.

    • @poloska9471
      @poloska9471 Год назад +3

      Согласен и даже на сегодняшний день цена означает что большенство бедных людей (а это большенство мира если смотреть вне запада) не могут себе позволить покупать шелковую одежду. Можно почти сказать что легенда продолжается))

  • @miyukiaoyama6125
    @miyukiaoyama6125 Год назад

    Sericulture is a very interesting topic. Thank you for this video, it's very helpful for my report.

  • @theultimatehoomanperson6701
    @theultimatehoomanperson6701 14 дней назад

    I love how they feed the baby silkworms food

  • @Thiago-sc8ts
    @Thiago-sc8ts Год назад +84

    Interessante como a produção dos gasulos do bicho da seda muda de país para país, como Índia, Japão e Brasil.
    Sou sericicultor e sempre é bom ter novos conhecimentos sobre essa maravilhosa cultura!

  • @luizmoriah3419
    @luizmoriah3419 Год назад +8

    Bem trabalhoso

  • @Loveanimals193
    @Loveanimals193 Год назад

    I am living in Vietnam but when i watch this video i felt i wanted to Japan to work thank so much

  • @yves-noel-mariegonnet1043
    @yves-noel-mariegonnet1043 Год назад

    Très intéressant! Merci!

  • @mediaaddict3997
    @mediaaddict3997 Год назад +118

    As a person who raised silk worms I think its important to note that the worms are very much still alive and inside the cocoons through the entire manufacturing process. When the worms spin their cocoons they typically produce one continuous thread. It is for this reason they are not allowed to leave the cocoons alive because it would damage the silk thread.

    • @janami-dharmam
      @janami-dharmam Год назад +19

      they are alive till the hot soapy water treatment. the timing is critical: if they are allowed few more hours, they will start eating the silk to get out. if it is too early, the yield will be less.

    • @arnonroyna4420
      @arnonroyna4420 Год назад +4

      LoL, yeah, I saw them being unraveled by the machines in the video.

    • @bhartiye_
      @bhartiye_ Год назад +7

      Do not eat animals meat

    • @ireneinwales
      @ireneinwales Год назад +43

      I never new this, I presumed they were harvesting empty cocoons from crops. I feel silly for that but sad how all that hard work the silk worm does, just satisfied it’s safe and ready to sleep then transform to beautiful white moth and that’s all taken away. I won’t ever buy silk.

    • @bhartiye_
      @bhartiye_ Год назад +7

      @@ireneinwales I won't ever eat animals meat

  • @ari_277
    @ari_277 Год назад +3

    Membuat saya kagum dengan prosesnya, ulat yang di dalam kepompong dimana.?

  • @keys2la
    @keys2la 2 месяца назад

    Simply Amazing!

  • @catdog7497
    @catdog7497 2 месяца назад

    This is an absolutely amazing process to watch. I would love to see how each spool is made on a smaller scale, how do they connect the silk threads from 1 bundle of cocoons to the next bundle of cocoons once the length of the first runs out? do they overlap 2/3 of the way through and just continually overlap new cocoon threads into the main thread?
    What happens to the silkworm that is in the cocoon? Is it soaked with the cocoon in hot water? What is left of it once all the threat is unwound from the cocoon? Is it a noticeable size and does it get thrown away or does it dissolve in the water?

  • @juanmartincourvilleplatani626
    @juanmartincourvilleplatani626 Год назад +105

    Increible proceso para obtener la seda, no me lo imaginaba de esta manera. Toda la mano de obra y el equipo esta tan bien sincronizado que solo puedo decir gracias por mostrarlo. No me puedo imaginar como hacian antes de la creacion de las diferentes maquinas que utilizan ahora. Como decimos en mi pais, Panama, me quito el sombrero y saludos al pueblo de japon por este logro milenario.

    • @mr-0074
      @mr-0074 Год назад +2

      Merci

    • @ezioauditore5616
      @ezioauditore5616 Год назад

      fueron los chinos que descubrieron la seda amigo, los griegos tuvieron que ir hasta china y robarse el gusano y la hoja

    • @syscabmcommunity3368
      @syscabmcommunity3368 Год назад +2

      Por eso una prenda de seda real es tan costosa..

    • @user-yk6yv6bg7v
      @user-yk6yv6bg7v Год назад

      Почему именно шляпу, а не носки)

    • @user-lw8ir2xn7q
      @user-lw8ir2xn7q Год назад

      ضضضضذذذذذذذذذذذذذذذذذذذذذذذذذذذذضذذذذذذ

  • @user-xx4rm1zo8y
    @user-xx4rm1zo8y Год назад +9

    Алланың құдіреті шексіз🤲🙏👍

  • @jasoncummings7052
    @jasoncummings7052 Год назад

    Absolutely amazing.

  • @galinamelnikova9855
    @galinamelnikova9855 Год назад +1

    Вот не думала, что ещё где- то выращивают шелковичных червей! Кругом одни синтетические ткани.А как же интересно !🌷

  • @yeagerxp
    @yeagerxp Год назад +3

    Excellent and informative work 👍👍👍Thank you for sharing. Take care of yourselves, be safe, and healthy 🇨🇦

  • @marycarmenledesma5916
    @marycarmenledesma5916 Год назад +46

    Que fascinante y buen video. Mis respetos a las personas que se dedican a este trabajo. Saludos desde Aguascalientes, México.