Silkworms Spin Cocoons That Spell Their Own Doom | Deep Look
Those precious silk garments in your closet were made by the caterpillar of a fuzzy white moth – thousands of them. Silkworms spin a cocoon with a single strand of silk up to ten city blocks long. Humans have bred these insects into weaving machines that can no longer survive in the wild.
SUBSCRIBE to Deep Look!
Please join our community on Patreon!
DEEP LOOK is an ultra-HD (4K) short video series created by KQED San Francisco and presented by PBS Digital Studios. See the unseen at the very edge of our visible world. Explore big scientific mysteries by going incredibly small.
—
The sumptuous silk in your satiny sheets and glamorous gowns comes from humble beginnings – a caterpillar of the domesticated silk moth. For almost five thousand years, people have raised silkworms for their unique, shimmering material. In just a few days, these caterpillars produce one fine thread of silk one kilometer long, and intricately weave it into their cocoons.
For most silkworms in captivity, this is where their journey ends. To preserve the integrity of the continuous silk thread in each cocoon, silk farmers kill the pupa inside the chrysalis by boiling, steam, or sun. Then the strands are loosened in hot water and unwound by hand using specialized spinners and silk harvesting tools. This raw silk is then gathered onto large spools and refined into commercially valuable threads. It can take up to 2000 silkworms to make one silk dress.
Today, the silk industry is valued at more than $10 billion globally, but it is more than just a luxury item. Silk is pound-for-pound stronger than steel, and it is now used in medicine to heal bones and tendons. Our five thousand year love affair with this extraordinary material continues to hold silkworms captive -- until we learn to spin silk better than they can.
__
– What other insects produce silk?
Animal-produced silk is actually quite common in the natural world. Spiders (of course), fleas, webspinners, caddisflies and even some ants and bees make silk. But only the silk made by the caterpillar of the domestic silk moth is widely cultivated by humans.
– Are silkworms edible?
Yes! Silkworms are enjoyed as a nutritious snack in many countries, including Thailand, Vietnam, China and Madagascar.
– Where do wild silk moths live?
Domestic silk moths (Bombyx mori) can’t survive in the wild without help from humans, but their cousins – the wild silk moth (Bombyx mandarina) can be found in Asia, in countries like China, Korea and Japan.
--- More great Deep Look episodes:
The Curious Webspinner Insect Knits a Cozy Home
Is a Spider’s Web a Part of Its Mind?
--- Shoutout!
🏆Congratulations🏆 to the first 5 (well, 6, we missed R Alan!) fans on our Deep Look Community Tab to correctly answer our GIF challenge!
TheMicroGuy
TheWhiteScatterbug
Manish Ravi
BobBob
Juhi Shah
R Alan
--- Thank you to our Top Patreon Supporters ($10 per month)!
Chris B Emrick
Burt Humburg
Karen Reynolds
Daisuke Goto
Adam Kurtz
Allison & Maka Masuda
David Deshpande
Wild Turkey
Tianxing Wang
Companion Cube
Mark Jobes
Blanca Vides
Kevin Judge
Jana Brenning
Aurora
monoirre
Roberta K Wright
Anastasia Grinkevic
Titania Juang
Supernovabetty
Syniurge
Carrie Mukaida
KW
El Samuels
Jellyman
Cristen Rasmussen
Scott Faunce
Mehdi
Nicky Orino
Kristy Freeman
Noreen Herrington
Cindy McGill
Sonia Tanlimco
Kelly Hong
SueEllen McCann
Nicolette Ray
Caitlin McDonough
Laurel Przybylski
Louis O’Neill
Shelley Pearson Cranshaw
Robert Amling
Misia Clive
吳怡彰
Jeremiah Sullivan
Delphine Tseng
Levi Cai
Silvan
Joshua Murallon Robertson
TierZoo
Shonara Rivas
Wade Tregaskis
Elizabeth Ann Ditz
Kenneth Fyrsterling
--- Follow Deep Look and KQED Science on social:
@deeplookofficial
Instagram:
Twitter:
--- About KQED
KQED, an NPR and PBS affiliate in San Francisco, CA, serves Northern California and beyond with a public-supported alternative to commercial TV, Radio and web media.
Funding for Deep Look is provided in part by PBS Digital Studios. Deep Look is a project of KQED Science, the largest science and environment reporting unit in California. KQED Science is supported by the Dirk and Charlene Kabcenell Foundation, Campaign 21 and the members of KQED.
#silkworm #silkmoth #deeplook
1 view
538
289
6 months ago 00:05:14 1
Silkworms Spin Cocoons That Spell Their Own Doom | Deep Look
1 year ago 00:06:00 1
Soncino borgo medievale e Castello di Soncino
2 years ago 00:07:29 4
Reck - B2 - Silkworm Spinning (Dave Hedger Remix)
2 years ago 00:08:09 4
Reck - B1 - Silkworm Spinning (Original Mix)
2 years ago 00:07:13 5
Reck - A - Silkworm Spinning (Pascal . Remix)
2 years ago 00:00:55 2
Modified silkworms produce fibers that 10 times stronger than kevlar
2 years ago 00:01:08 1
Chiara Vigo The last woman who makes sea silk
4 years ago 00:02:12 1
Silk Farm (1966)
4 years ago 00:04:21 1
Silk Worms - Kashmir (1970-1979)
4 years ago 00:10:43 1
Fibres To Fabrics (1940-1949)
5 years ago 00:06:07 37
Silk from Scratch | How To Make Everything: Suit (6/10)
5 years ago 00:03:22 2
Saint Saviour - The Place I Want To Be (feat. Badly Drawn Boy)
7 years ago 00:04:06 1
Silkworms Eating, Cuddling & Spinning Timelapse
8 years ago 00:02:23 9
Silkworms in “Tiangong-2“ Space Lab Begin to Spin Cocoons