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{{Short description|Terrestrial invertebrate, order Opisthopora}}

{{pp-move-indef|small=yes}} {{pp-semi-indef|small=yes}}
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{{for|the LPG album|The Earthworm (album)}}
{{Automatic taxobox
{{Taxobox
| fossil_range = {{fossil_range|209|0|ref=<ref>{{cite web |last1=Anderson |first1=Frank |last2=James |first2=Samuel |title=The evolution of earthworms|url=https://blogs.biomedcentral.com/bmcseriesblog/2017/06/01/the-evolution-of-earthworms/ |website=BMC |date=June 2017 |access-date=3 February 2024}}</ref>}}
| name = Earthworm
|image=Earthworm.JPG
| image_width = 250px
|image_caption=An unidentified earthworm species with a well-developed ]
| image2 = Regenwurm1.jpg
|taxon=Lumbricina
| image2_width = 250px
|authority=
| image2_caption = ''],'' the Common European Earthworm
| regnum = ]ia
| phylum = ]
| classis = ]
| ordo = ]
| subordo = '''Lumbricina'''
| subdivision_ranks = Families
| subdivision =
&nbsp; ]<br />
&nbsp; ]<br />
&nbsp; ]<br />
&nbsp; ]<br />
&nbsp; ]<br />
&nbsp; ]<br />
}} }}
'''Earthworm''' is a slang term meaning "black male prostitute with super human powers." In classical systems they were placed in the order '''Opisthopora''', on the basis of the male pores opening posterior to the female pores, even though the internal male segments are anterior to the female. Theoretical ] studies have placed them instead in the suborder '''Lumbricina''' of the order Haplotaxida, but this may again soon change. Folk names for the earthworm include "dew-worm", "rainworm", "night crawler" and "angleworm" (due to its use as fishing bait).


An '''earthworm''' is a ]-dwelling ] ] that belongs to the ] ]. The term is the ] for the largest members of the ] (or ], depending on the author) ]. In classical systems, they were in the order of ] since the male pores opened posterior to the female pores, although the internal male segments are anterior to the female. Theoretical ] studies have placed them in the suborder ] of the order ], but this may change.{{clarify|reason=soon/when? who? reference below is from 14 years ago|date=December 2020}} Other ] names for earthworms include "dew-worm", "rainworm", "nightcrawler", and "angleworm" (from its use as ] ]s). Larger terrestrial earthworms are also called ]s (which translates to "big worms") as opposed to the ]s ("small worms") in the ] families ], ] and ]. The megadriles are characterized by a distinct ] (more extensive than that of microdriles) and a ] with true ].<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Omodeo|first=Pietro|date=2000|title=Evolution and biogeography of megadriles (Annelida, Clitellata)|journal=Italian Journal of Zoology|volume=67-2|issue=2|pages=179–201|doi=10.1080/11250000009356313|s2cid=86293273|doi-access=free}}</ref>
Earthworms are also called '''megadriles''' (or big worms), as opposed to the ]s (or small worms) in the families ], ], and ], among others. The megadriles are characterized by having a multilayered ] (which is much more obvious than the single-layered one of the microdriles), a vascular system with true capillaries, and male pores behind the female pores.


Earthworms are commonly found in moist, ]-rich soil, eating a wide variety of ]s,<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Bonkowski |first1=Michael |last2=Griffiths |first2=Bryan S. |last3=Ritz |first3=Karl |date=November 2000 |title=Food preferences of earthworms for soil fungi |journal=Pedobiologia |volume=44-6 |issue=6 |pages=667 |doi=10.1078/S0031-4056(04)70080-3 |bibcode=2000Pedob..44..666B }}</ref> which include ], living ], ], ], ], ] and other ]s.<ref>{{Cite book |last1=Lofty |first1=Clive A. |last2=Lofty |first2=J. R. |title=Biology of Earthworms |publisher=Chapman & Hall |year=1977 |isbn=0-412-14950-8 |location=London |pages=80}}</ref> An earthworm's digestive system runs the length of its body.<ref>{{Cite book|last1=Edwards|first1=Clive A.|title=Biology of Earthworms|last2=Lofty|first2=J.R.|publisher=Chapman & Hall|year=1977|isbn=0-412-14950-8|location=London|pages=19}}</ref> They are one of nature's most important ]s and ]s, and also serve as ] for many low-level ]s within the ecosystems.
==Anatomy==
The basic body plan of an earthworm is a tube, the digestive system, within a tube, the muscular slimy outer body. The body is annular, formed of segments that are most specialized in the anterior. Earthworms have a simple circulatory system. They have two main blood vessels that extend through the length of their body: a ] blood vessel which leads the blood to the ] end, and a dorsal blood vessel which leads to the anterior end. The dorsal vessel is contractile and pumps blood forward, where it is pumped into the ventral vessel by a series of "hearts" (aortic arches) which vary in number in the different taxa. A typical ] will have 5 hearts. The blood is distributed from the ventral vessel into capillaries on the body wall and other organs and into a vascular sinus in the gut wall, where gases and nutrients are exchanged. This arrangement may be complicated in the various groups by suboesophageal, supraoesophageal, parietal and neural vessels, but the basic arrangement holds in all earthworms. Earthworms eat in a unique way: their mouth cavity connects directly into the digestive tract without any intermediate processes. Most earthworms are decomposers feeding on undecayed leaf and other plant matter, others are more ].


Earthworms exhibit an externally segmented tube-within-a-tube ] with corresponding internal segmentations, and usually have ] on all segments.<ref>{{Cite book |last1=Edwards |first1=Clive A. |last2=Lofty |first2=J. R. |title=Biology of Earthworms |publisher=Chapman & Hall |year=1977 |isbn=0-412-14950-8 |location=London |pages=preface}}</ref> They have a ] wherever soil, water and temperature conditions allow.<ref>{{Cite book |last1=Coleman |first1=David C. |last2=Crossley |first2=D.A. |last3=Hendrix |first3=Paul F. |title=Fundamentals of Soil Ecology |publisher=Elsevier Academic Press |year=2004 |isbn=0-12-179726-0 |location=Amsterdam; Boston |pages=170}}</ref> They have a double transport system made of ] that moves within the fluid-filled ] and a simple, closed ], and ] (breathe) via ]. As soft-bodied invertebrates, they lack a true ], but their structure is maintained by fluid-filled coelom chambers that function as a ].{{citation needed|date=February 2022}}
*


Earthworms have a ] consisting of two ] above the ], one on either side, connected to an axial ] running along its length to ] and ] in each segment. Large numbers of ] concentrate near its mouth. Circumferential and longitudinal muscles edging each segment let the worm move. Similar sets of muscles line the ], and their actions propel digested food toward the worm's ].<ref name="Integrated Principles of Zoology">{{cite book|author=Cleveland P. Hickman Jr.|author2=Larry S. Roberts|author3=Frances M Hickman|title=Integrated Principles of Zoology|year=1984|edition=7th|publisher=Times Mirror/Mosby College Publishing|isbn=978-0-8016-2173-4|page=|url=https://archive.org/details/integratedprinci7ed0hick/page/344}}</ref>
==Reproduction==<!-- This section is linked from ] -->
]
Earthworms are ]s: They have 2 pairs of ], surrounded by 2 pairs of testes sacs. There are 2 pairs of ] which produce, store and release the sperm via the male pores, and ovaries and ovipores that release eggs via female pores. However, most also have one or more pairs of ]e (depending on the species) that are internal sacs which receive and store sperm from the other worm in copulation. Some species use external ]s for transfer instead.


Earthworms are ]s: each worm carries male and female ]s and ]. When mating, two individual earthworms will exchange ] and fertilize each other's ].
The male reproductive organs consist of two pairs of testes, present ventro-laterally in the 10th and 11th segments. Each testis is made up of 4 to 8 processes containing spermatogonia. Each testis is enclosed in a pair of testes sacs which are filled with fluid. It is bilobed in the front and on the posterior side provided with a pair of ciliated spermaducal funnels, one on either side. Two pairs of seminal vesicles are present in the 11th and 12th segments which collect the sperm fluid. The testes sac of the tenth segment opens in the seminal vesicle of the 11th segment and testis sac of the 11th segment opens into the seminal vesicle of the 12th segment.


== Anatomy ==
The sperm mother cells of the testes when shed offreach the seminal vesicle where they mature into sperms and then again passed into testes. Sperms from the testes are passed into the spermiducal funnels which lead into vas deferens. A pair of vasa deferentia on either side of nerve cord runs from the 12th segment to prostate region and opens out together with the prostate duct in the 18th segment as male genital aperture. The prostate is a large irregular gland present from the 16th to 20th or the 17th to 21st segments on either side, and it produces the prostate fluid. In the 17th and 19th segments each is found a pair of rounded, white fluffy masses, the accossory glands. These glands are present on ventro-lateral bodywall, one on either side of the nerve cord. They open to the exterior by a number of ducts in two pairs of genital pappillae, situated externally on either side of the mid-ventral line.
=== Form and function ===
]
Depending on the species, an adult earthworm can be from {{convert|10|mm|in|abbr=on}} long and {{convert|1|mm|in|abbr=on}} wide to {{convert|3|m|ft|abbr=on}} long and over {{convert|25|mm|in|abbr=on}} wide, but the typical '']'' grows to about {{convert|360|mm|in|abbr=on}} long.{{sfn|Blakemore|2012|p=xl}} Probably the longest worm on confirmed records is '']'' that extends up to 3&nbsp;m (10&nbsp;ft) <ref name ="Blakemore et al., 2007 page 23">{{cite web |last=Blakemore |first=R. J. |year=2007 |title=Megascolex (Promegascolex) mekongianus Cognetti, 1922 – its extent, ecology and allocation to Amynthas (Clitellata/Oligochaeta: Megascolecidae) |publisher=Opuscula Zoologica |url=http://opuscula.elte.hu/PDF/Tomus36/3_Blakemore.pdf |display-authors=etal }}</ref> in the mud along the banks of the 4,350&nbsp;km (2,703&nbsp;mi) ] in Southeast Asia.


From front to back, the basic shape of the earthworm is a cylindrical tube-in-a-tube, divided into a series of segments (called ]) that compartmentalize the body. Furrows are generally{{sfn|Edwards|Bohlen|1996|p=11}} externally visible on the body demarking the segments; dorsal pores and ]s exude a fluid that moistens and protects the worm's surface, allowing it to breathe. Except for the mouth and anal segments, each segment carries bristlelike hairs called lateral ]e{{sfn|Sims|Gerard|1985|pp=3–6}} used to anchor parts of the body during movement;{{sfn|Edwards|Bohlen|1996|p=3}} species may have four pairs of setae on each segment or more than eight sometimes forming a complete circle of setae per segment.{{sfn|Sims|Gerard|1985|pp=3–6}} Special ventral setae are used to anchor mating earthworms by their penetration into the bodies of their mates.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Feldkamp|first=J.|date=1924|title=Feldkamp, J. "Untersuchungen über die Geschlechtsmerkmale und die Begattung der Regenwurmer Zoologische Jahrbücher|journal=Anatomie|volume=46|pages=609–632}}</ref>
The female reproductive organs consist of a pair of ovaries, a pair of oviducts and four pairs of spermathecae.The ovaries are a pair of small, whitish, lobed structures, attached to the hinder face of the septum of the 12/13 segment, one on each side of the nerve cord.Each ovary has mature ova towards distal end and immature towards septal side.Each oviducal funnel leads into oviduct which opens outside in the 14th segment in the form of a common oviducal aperture.The four pairs of spermathecae are found on either side of the nerve cord in the 6th, 7th, 8th and 9th segments.Each spermathecae has two parts, a sac like structure, ampulla and a short diverticulum.The diverticulum stores the sperms while ampulla provides a nourishing fluid to them.These spermathecae open outside the bodyby four pairs of apertures one on either ventro-lateral sides of each segmental joint, i.e a pair in the 5-6, 6-7, 7-8, 8-9th segments.The mature ova shed from the ovaries, pass through the oviducal funnels into the oviduct and finally to the exterior through the female genital pore.
] and ] are separate processes in earthworms. The mating pair overlap front ends ]ly and each exchanges sperm with the other. The clitellum becomes very reddish to pinkish in color. The cocoon, or egg case, is secreted by the ] band which is near the front of the worm, but behind the spermathecae. Some time after copulation, long after the worms have separated, the clitellum secretes the cocoon which forms a ring around the worm. The worm then backs out of the ring, and as it does so, injects its own eggs and the other worm's sperm into it. As the worm slips out, the ends of the cocoon seal to form a vaguely lemon-shaped incubator (]) in which the embryonic worms develop. They emerge as small, but fully formed earthworms, except for a lack of the sex structures, which develop later in about 60 to 90 days. They attain full size in about one year. Several common earthworm species are mostly ], that is, with asexual reproduction resulting in clones.


Generally, within a species, the number of segments found is consistent across specimens, and individuals are born with the number of segments they will have throughout their lives. The first body segment (segment number 1) features both the earthworm's mouth and, overhanging the mouth, a fleshy lobe called the ], which seals the entrance when the worm is at rest, but is also used to feel and chemically sense the worm's surroundings. Some species of earthworm can even use the prehensile prostomium to grab and drag items such as grasses and leaves into their burrow.
==Regeneration==
Earthworms have the facility to regenerate lost segments, but this ability varies between species and depends on the extent of the damage. Stephenson (1930) devoted a chapter of his monograph to this topic, while G.E. Gates spent 20 years studying regeneration in a variety of species, but “because little interest was shown”, Gates (1972) only published a few of his findings that, nevertheless, show it is theoretically possible to grow two whole worms from a bisected specimen in certain species. Gates’s reports included:
*'']'' (Savigny, 1826) with head regeneration, in an anterior direction, possible at each intersegmental level back to and including 23/24, while tails were regenerated at any levels behind 20/21 .
*''Lumbricus terrestris'' Linneus, 1758 replacing anterior segments from as far back as 13/14 and 16/17 but tail regeneration was never found.
*''Perionyx excavatus'' Perrier, 1872 readily regenerated lost parts of the body, in an anterior direction from as far back as 17/18, and in a posterior direction as far forward as 20/21.
*''Lampito mauritii'' Kinberg, 1867 with regeneration in anterior direction at all levels back to 25/26 and tail regeneration from 30/31; head regeneration was sometimes believed to be caused by internal amputation resulting from '']'' sp. larval infestation.
*''Criodrilus lacuum'' Hoffmeister, 1845 also has prodigious regenerative capacity with ‘head’ regeneration from as far back as 40/41.


An adult earthworm develops a belt-shaped glandular swelling, called the ], which covers several segments toward the front part of the animal. This is part of the reproductive system and produces egg capsules. The ] is most commonly cylindrical like the rest of the body, but depending on the species, it may also be quadrangular, octagonal, trapezoidal, or flattened. The last segment is called the ]; the earthworm's anus, a short vertical slit, is found on this segment.{{sfn|Sims|Gerard|1985|pp=3–6}}
An unidentified Tasmanian earthworm shown growing a second head is reported here: .


]
==Behavior==


The exterior of an individual segment is a thin ] over the skin, commonly pigmented red to brown, which has specialized cells that secrete mucus over the cuticle to keep the body moist and ease movement through the soil. Under the skin is a layer of nerve tissue, and two layers of muscles—a thin outer layer of circular muscle, and a much thicker inner layer of longitudinal muscle.{{sfn|Edwards|Bohlen|1996|p=8-9}} Interior to the muscle layer is a fluid-filled chamber called a ]{{sfn|Edwards|Bohlen|1996|p=1}} that by its pressurization provides structure to the worm's boneless body. The segments are separated from each other by septa (the plural of "septum"){{sfn|Sims|Gerard|1985|p=8}} which are perforated transverse walls, allowing the coelomic fluid to pass between segments.{{sfn|Edwards|Bohlen|1996|p=12}} A pair of structures called ]s are located at the back of each septum; a nephric tubule leads from each nephrostome through the septum and into the following segment. This tubule then leads to the main body fluid filtering organ, the ] or metanephridium, which removes metabolic waste from the ] and expels it through pores called nephridiopores on the worm's sides; usually, two nephridia (sometimes more) are found in most segments.{{sfn|Edwards|Bohlen|1996|p=6}} At the centre of a worm is the ], which runs straight through from mouth to anus without coiling, and is flanked above and below by blood vessels (the dorsal blood vessel and the ventral blood vessel as well as a subneural blood vessel) and the ], and is surrounded in each segment by a pair of pallial blood vessels that connect the dorsal to the subneural blood vessels.
===Rainstorms===
{{ref improve|section|date=March 2007}}
{{rewrite}}


Many earthworms can eject coelomic fluid through pores in the back in response to stress; the Australian ''Didymogaster sylvaticus'' (known as the "blue squirter earthworm") can squirt fluid as high as {{convert|30|cm|in|abbr=on}}.<ref name ="Meet the squirting earthworm">{{cite web |author=Myrmecofourmis |year=2018 |title=Meet the squirting earthworm |publisher=Youtube |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PuQEAuM9De8 | archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211030/PuQEAuM9De8| archive-date=2021-10-30|format=]}}{{cbignore}}</ref>{{sfn|Edwards|Bohlen|1996|p=12}}
Earthworms are seen on the surface after large rain storms flood the soil because, despite needing a moist environment to allow the diffusion of gases across their skin membrane, where the soil becomes saturated they begin to drown. To protect themselves they escape to the surface, but if the ground is un-naturally hard they may after become stranded and die from exposure. This is why they are seen in places like driveways after a storm. However, this theory is not applicable to certain earthworm species that can survive immersion for several days in oxygenated water.


=== Nervous system ===
].]]An alternative theory concerning this behaviour is that as some species (notably '']'') come to the surface to mate they may become stranded. However, as this behaviour is limited to only a few species and ''L. terrestris'' is rarely, if ever, one of those found stranded on impermeable surfaces, this theory does not seem a very likely explanation.
]


==== Central nervous system ====
Another theory is that the worms may be using the moist conditions on the surface to travel more quickly than they can underground, thus colonizing new areas more quickly. Since the relative humidity is higher during and after rain, they do not become dehydrated. This is a dangerous activity in the daytime, since earthworms die quickly when exposed to direct sunlight with its strong ] content, and are more vulnerable to predators such as ].
The CNS consists of a bilobed ] (cerebral ], or supra-pharyngeal ganglion), sub-pharyngeal ganglia, circum-pharyngeal connectives and a ].


Earthworms' brains consist of a pair of pear-shaped cerebral ganglia. These are located in the dorsal side of the alimentary canal in the third segment, in a groove between the ] and ].
A further theory is that, as there are many other organisms in the ground as well, and their respiration increases ], this gas may dissolve into the rainwater to form ]. As the soil becomes too ] for the worms, they seek a more neutral environment on the surface.
Earthworms chew soil and defecate in it which fertilizes the soil for plants. The chewing helps make hard soil softer. Earthworms are commonly used by gardeners for these reasons.


A pair of circum-pharyngeal connectives from the brain encircle the pharynx and then connect with a pair of sub-pharyngeal ganglia located below the pharynx in the fourth segment. This arrangement means the brain, sub-pharyngeal ganglia and the circum-pharyngeal connectives form a nerve ring around the pharynx.
==Locomotion and importance to soil==
]
Earthworms travel underground by the means of waves of muscular contractions which alternately shorten and lengthen the body. The shortened part is anchored to the surrounding soil by tiny claw-like bristles (]e) set along its segmented length. (In all the body segments except the first, last and clitellum, there is a ring of S- shaped setae, embedded in the epidermal pit of each segment,perichaetine) The whole burrowing process is aided by the secretion of lubricating mucus. Worms can make gurgling noises underground when disturbed as a result of the worm moving through its lubricated tunnels. They also work as biological "pistons' forcing air through the tunnels as they move. Thus earthworm activity aerates and mixes the soil, and is constructive to mineralization and nutrient uptake by vegetation. Certain species of earthworm come to the surface and graze on the higher concentrations of organic matter present there, mixing it with the mineral soil. Because a high level of organic matter mixing is associated with soil fertility, an abundance of earthworms is beneficial to the ]. In fact as long ago as 1881 ] wrote:
''It may be doubted whether there are many other animals which have played so important a part in the history of the world, as have these lowly organized creatures'' <ref>], ''The formation of vegetable mould through the action of worms, with observations on their habits''. Found at </ref>


The ventral nerve cord (formed by nerve cells and nerve fibers) begins at the sub-pharyngeal ganglia and extends below the alimentary canal to the most posterior body segment. The ventral nerve cord has a swelling, or ganglion, in each segment, i.e. a segmental ganglion, which occurs from the fifth to the last segment of the body. There are also three giant ]s, one medial giant axon (MGA) and two lateral giant axons (LGAs) on the mid-dorsal side of the ventral nerve cord. The MGA is 0.07&nbsp;mm in diameter and transmits in an anterior-posterior direction at a rate of 32.2&nbsp;m/s. The LGAs are slightly narrower at 0.05&nbsp;mm in diameter and transmit in a posterior-anterior direction at 12.6&nbsp;m/s. The two LGAs are connected at regular intervals along the body and are therefore considered one giant axon.<ref name="expt">{{cite web|url=https://backyardbrains.com/experiments/comparingNerveSpeed#prettyPhoto|title=Experiment: Comparing speeds of two nerve fiber sizes|publisher=BackyardBrains|access-date=April 4, 2015}}</ref><ref name="Drewes">{{cite journal|title=Giant nerve fibre activity in intact, freely moving earthworms |last1=Drewes |first1=C. D. |last2=Landa |first2=K. B. |last3=McFall |first3=J. L. |journal=The Journal of Experimental Biology|volume=72|pages=217–227|year=1978|doi=10.1242/jeb.72.1.217|pmid=624897|doi-access=free}}</ref>
==Benefits==
The major benefits of earthworm activities to soil fertility can be summarized as:
* '''Biological'''. In many soils, earthworms play a major role in converting large pieces of organic matter (e.g. dead leaves) into rich ], and thus improving soil fertility. This is achieved by the worm's actions of pulling down below any organic matter deposited on the dried dirt, such as leaf fall or manure, either for food or when it needs to plug its burrow. Once in the burrow, the worm will shred the leaf and partially digest it, then mingle it with the earth by saturating it with intestinal secretions. Worm casts (see below) can contain 40% more humus than the top 9" of soil in which the worm is living.
]
* '''Chemical'''. As well as dead ], the earthworm also ingests any other soil particles that are small enough—including stones up to 1/20 of an inch (1.25mm) across—into its gizzard wherein minute fragments of grit grind everything into a fine paste which is then digested in the stomach. When the worm excretes this in the form of casts which are deposited on the surface or deeper in the soil, minerals and plant nutrients are made available in an accessible form. Investigations in the ] show that fresh earthworm casts are 5 times richer in available ], 7 times richer in available ]s and 11 times richer in available ] than the surrounding upper 6 inches (150 mm) of soil. In conditions where there is plenty of available humus, the weight of casts produced may be greater than 4.5 kg (10 lb) per worm per year, in itself an indicator of why it pays the gardener or farmer to keep worm populations high.
* '''Physical'''. By its burrowing actions, the earthworm is of great value in keeping the soil structure open, creating a multitude of channels which allow the processes of both aeration and drainage to occur. ] co-founder ] points out that by sliding in their tunnels, earthworms "act as an innumerable army of pistons pumping air in and out of the soils on a 24 hour cycle (more rapidly at night)" <ref>Mollison, Bill, ''Permaculture- A Designer's Manual'', Tagari Press, 1988</ref>. Thus the earthworm not only creates passages for air and water to traverse, but is itself a vital component in the living biosystem that is healthy soil. Earthworms continue to move through the soil due to the excretion of mucus into the soil that acts as a lubricant for easier movement of the worm.
See ].
The earthworm's existence cannot be taken for granted. Dr. W. E. ] observed "tremendous numerical differences between adjacent gardens" (''Soil, Humus And Health''), and worm populations are affected by a host of environmental factors, many of which can be influenced by good management practices on the part of the gardener or farmer.


==== Peripheral nervous system ====
Darwin estimated that ] contains up to 53,000 worms per acre (13/m²), but more recent research from ] has produced figures suggesting that even poor soil may support 250,000/acre (62/m²), whilst rich fertile farmland may have up to 1,750,000/acre (432/m²), meaning that the weight of earthworms beneath the farmer's soil could be greater than that of his livestock upon its surface. One thing is certain however: rich, fertile soil that is cared for organically and well-fed and husbanded by its steward will reap its reward in a healthy worm population, whilst denuded, overworked, and eroded land will almost certainly contain fewer, scrawny, undernourished specimens.
*Eight to ten nerves arise from the cerebral ganglia to supply the ], buccal chamber and ].
*Three pairs of nerves arise from the subpharyangeal ganglia to supply the second, third and fourth segment.
*Three pairs of nerves extend from each ] to supply various structures of the segment.


The sympathetic nervous system consists of nerve plexuses in the epidermis and alimentary canal. (A plexus is a web of connected nerve cells.) The nerves that run along the body wall pass between the outer circular and inner longitudinal muscle layers of the wall. They give off branches that form the intermuscular plexus and the subepidermal plexus. These nerves connect with the cricopharyngeal connective.
== Earthworms as invasive species ==
From a total of around 6,000 species, only about 120 species are widely distributed around the world, these are the peregrine or cosmopolitan earthworms.<ref>Cosmopolitan Earthworms </ref>


=== North America === ==== Movement ====
]
A total of approximately 182 earthworm taxa in 12 families are reported from America north of Mexico, i.e., USA & Canada, of which 60 (ca. 33%) are exotic/introduced. Only two genera of ] earthworms are indigenous to North America while introduced genera have spread to areas where earthworms did not formerly exist, especially in the north where forest development relies on a large amount of undecayed leaf matter. When worms decompose that leaf layer, the ecology may shift making the habitat unsurvivable for certain species of trees, ferns and wildflowers. Currently there is no economically feasible method for controlling invasive earthworms in forests. Earthworms normally spread slowly, but can be quickly introduced by human activities such as construction earthmoving, or by fishermen releasing bait, or by plantings from other areas. <ref>North American Earthworms </ref>
].]]
On the surface, crawling speed varies both within and among individuals. Earthworms crawl faster primarily by taking longer "strides" and a greater frequency of strides. Larger '']'' worms crawl at a greater absolute speed than smaller worms. They achieve this by taking slightly longer strides but with slightly lower stride frequencies.<ref name="Quillin">{{cite journal|title=Kinematic scaling of locomotion by hydrostatic animals: ontogeny of peristaltic crawling by the earthworm lumbricus terrestris|author=Quillin, K.J.|year=1999|journal=Journal of Experimental Biology|volume=202|issue=6|pages=661–674|doi=10.1242/jeb.202.6.661|pmid=10021320}}</ref>


Touching an earthworm, which causes a "pressure" response as well as (often) a response to the dehydrating quality of the salt on human skin (toxic to earthworms), stimulates the subepidermal nerve plexus which connects to the intermuscular plexus and causes the longitudinal muscles to contract. This causes the writhing movements observed when a human picks up an earthworm. This behaviour is a ] and does not require the CNS; it occurs even if the nerve cord is removed. Each segment of the earthworm has its own nerve plexus. The plexus of one segment is not connected directly to that of adjacent segments. The nerve cord is required to connect the nervous systems of the segments.<ref name="Cronodon">{{cite web|publisher=Cronodon|title=Earthworm-nervous system|url=http://cronodon.com/BioTech/Earthworm_NS.html|access-date=April 3, 2015}}</ref>
=== Australia ===
] has 650 known species of native earthworm that survive in both rich and in nutrient-poor conditions where they may be sensitive to changes in the environment. Introduced species are commonly found in agricultural environments along with persistent natives. Most of the 75 or so exotics have been accidentally introduced into Australia. The total species numbers are predicted to exceed 2,000. <ref>Blakemore, Rob, Transactions of the Royal Zoological Society of New South Wales, 1999</ref>


The giant axons carry the fastest signals along the nerve cord. These are emergency signals that initiate reflex escape behaviours. The larger dorsal giant axon conducts signals the fastest, from the rear to the front of the animal. If the rear of the worm is touched, a signal is rapidly sent forwards causing the longitudinal muscles in each segment to contract. This causes the worm to shorten very quickly as an attempt to escape from a predator or other potential threat. The two medial giant axons connect with each other and send signals from the front to the rear. Stimulation of these causes the earthworm to very quickly retreat (perhaps contracting into its burrow to escape a bird).
== Special habitats ==
While, as the name ''earthworm'' suggests, the main habitat of earthworms is in soil, the situation is more complicated than that. The brandling worm '']'' lives in decaying plant matter and manure. '']'' from ] and the ] is generally found in decaying conifer logs or in extremely acidic humus. '']'' and '']'' and several others are found in mud in streams. Some species are arboreal. Even in the soil species, there are special habitats, such as soils derived from ] which have an earthworm fauna of their own.


The presence of a nervous system is essential for an animal to be able to experience ] or ]. However, other physiological capacities are also required such as opioid sensitivity and central modulation of responses by analgesics.<ref name="Elwood">{{Cite journal|journal=ILAR Journal|year=2011|volume=52|issue=2|pages=175–84|title=Pain and suffering in invertebrates?|author= Elwood, R.W.|pmid=21709310|doi=10.1093/ilar.52.2.175|doi-access=free}}</ref> ] and ]-like substances have been found in earthworms. Injections of ] (an opioid antagonist) inhibit the escape responses of earthworms. This indicates that opioid substances play a role in sensory modulation, similar to that found in many vertebrates.<ref name="ILAR">{{Cite journal|journal=ILAR Journal|volume=33|issue=1–2|pages=25–31|title=A question of pain in invertebrates|author=Smith, J.A.|doi=10.1093/ilar.33.1-2.25|year=1991|doi-access=free}}</ref>
==Ecology==
Earthworms are classified into three main ecophysiological categories: (1) leaf litter/compost dwelling worms (epigeic) e.g. ''Eisenia fetida''; (2) topsoil or subsoil dwelling worms (endogeics); and (3) worms that construct permanent deep burrows through which they visit the surface to obtain plant material for food, such as leaves (anecic), e.g. ''Lumbricus terrestris''. <ref name="Earthworms: Renewers of agroecosystems"></ref>


===Sensory reception===
Earthworm populations depend on both physical and chemical properties of the soil, such as soil temperature, moisture, pH, salts, aeration and texture, as well as available food, and the ability of the species to reproduce and disperse. One of the most important environmental factors is ], but earthworms vary in their preferences. Most earthworms favor neutral to slightly acidic soil. However, ''Lumbricus terrestris'' are still present in a pH of 5.4 and '']'' at a pH of 4.3 and some ] are present in extremely acid humic soils. Soil pH may also influence the numbers of worms that go into ]. The more acid the soil, the sooner worms go into diapause, and remain in diapause the longest time at a pH of 6.4.
====Photosensitivity====
{{See also|Photosensitivity}}
Although some worms have ]s, earthworms do not. However, they do have specialized photosensitive cells called "light cells of Hess". These photoreceptor cells have a central intracellular cavity (]) filled with ]. As well as the microvilli, there are several sensory cilia in the phaosome which are structurally independent of the microvilli.<ref name="eyes">{{cite journal|journal=Zeitschrift für Zellforschung und Mikroskopische Anatomie|year=1970|volume=104|issue=3|pages=345–357|title=Fine structure of photoreceptor cells in the earthworm, ''Lumbricus Terrestris'' |last1=Röhlich |first1=P. |last2=Aros |first2=B. |last3=Virágh |first3=Sz. |doi=10.1007/BF00335687 |pmid=4193489 |s2cid=22771585}}</ref> The photoreceptors are distributed in most parts of the epidermis, but are more concentrated on the back and sides of the worm. A relatively small number occur on the ventral surface of the first segment. They are most numerous in the prostomium, and reduce in density in the first three segments; they are very few in number past the third segment.<ref name="Cronodon" />


====Epidermal receptor (Sense organ)====
Earthworms form the base of many food chains. They are preyed upon by many species of ]s, e.g. ]s, ], ]s, ]s, and both ]s and ]s. Some snakes feed on them and mammals such as bears, foxes, ]s and ] eat many earthworms as well. Earthworms are also eaten by many invertebrates such as ]s and other ]s, ]s, ]s. Earthworms have many internal ]s including ], ], ]s. They are found in many parts of earthworms' bodies such as blood, seminal vesicles, ], ], or in the ]s.


These receptors are abundant and distributed all over the ]. Each receptor shows a slightly elevated cuticle which covers a group of tall, slender and columnar receptor cells. These cells bear small hairlike processes at their outer ends and their inner ends are connected with nerve fibres. The epidermal receptors are tactile in function. They are also concerned with changes in temperature and respond to chemical stimuli. Earthworms are extremely sensitive to touch and mechanical vibration.
The application of chemical fertilizers, sprays and dusts can have a disastrous effect on earthworm populations. Nitrogenous fertilizers tend to create ], which are fatal to the worms, and often dead specimens are to be found on the surface following the application of substances like ], ] and ]. In ], the use of ] on ]s almost completely wiped out the giant ].


====] receptor (Sense organ)====
Therefore, the most reliable way to maintain or increase the levels of worm population in the soil is to avoid the application of artificial chemicals. Adding organic matter, preferably as a surface mulch, on a regular basis will provide them with their food and nutrient requirements, and also creates the optimum conditions of heat (cooler in summer and warmer in winter) and moisture to stimulate their activity.


These receptors are located only in the epithelium of the buccal chamber. These receptors are gustatory and olfactory (related to taste and smell). They also respond to chemical stimuli. (Chemoreceptor)
A recent threat to earthworm populations in the ] is the ] (''Artiposthia triangulata''), which feeds upon the earthworm, but in the UK has no natural predator itself. At present sightings of the New Zealand flatworm have been mainly localised, but this is no reason for complacency as it has spread extensively since its introduction in 1960 through contaminated soil and plant pots. Any sightings of the flatworm should be reported to the ], which is monitoring its spread.


=== Digestive system ===
==Economic impact==
The ] of the earthworm is a straight tube that extends from the worm's mouth to its ]. It is differentiated into an ] and associated glands which are embedded in the wall of the alimentary canal itself. The alimentary canal consists of a mouth, buccal cavity (generally running through the first one or two segments of the earthworm), pharynx (running generally about four segments in length), esophagus, crop, gizzard (usually), and intestine. {{sfn|Edwards|Bohlen|1996|p=13}}
Various species of worms are used in ], the practice of feeding organic waste to earthworms to decompose (digest) it, a form of ]ing by the use of worms. These are usually '']'' (or its close relative '']'') or the Brandling worm, also known as the Tiger worm or Red Wiggler, and are distinct from soil-dwelling earthworms.


Food enters at the mouth. The ] acts as a suction pump; its muscular walls draw in food. In the pharynx, the pharyngeal glands secrete ]. Food moves into the ], where ] (from the blood and ingested from previous meals) is pumped in to maintain proper blood calcium levels in the blood and food ]. From there the food passes into the crop and gizzard. In the ], strong muscular contractions grind the food with the help of mineral particles ingested along with the food. Once through the gizzard, food continues through the intestine for digestion. The intestine secretes ] to digest proteins, ] to digest polysaccharides, ] to digest cellulose, and lipase to digest fats.<ref name="Integrated Principles of Zoology" /> Earthworms use, in addition to the digestive proteins, a class of surface active compounds called ], which help digest plant material.<ref>{{Cite journal|title = Unique metabolites protect earthworms against plant polyphenols|journal = Nature Communications|date = 2015-08-04|pmc = 4532835|pmid = 26241769|pages = 7869|volume = 6|doi = 10.1038/ncomms8869|language = en|first1 = Manuel|last1 = Liebeke|first2 = Nicole|last2 = Strittmatter|first3 = Sarah|last3 = Fearn|first4 = A. John|last4 = Morgan|first5 = Peter|last5 = Kille|first6 = Jens|last6 = Fuchser|first7 = David|last7 = Wallis|first8 = Vitalii|last8 = Palchykov|first9 = Jeremy|last9 = Robertson|bibcode = 2015NatCo...6.7869L}}</ref> Instead of being coiled like a mammalian intestine, in the earthworm's intestine a large mid-dorsal, tongue-like fold is present, called a ], with many folds running along its length, increasing its surface area to increase nutrient absorption. The intestine has its own pair of muscle layers like the body, but in reverse order—an inner circular layer within an outer longitudinal layer.{{sfn|Edwards|Bohlen|1996|pp=13–15}}
Earthworms are sold all over the world. The earthworm market is sizable. According to Doug Collicut (see "Nightcrawler" link below), "In 1980, 370 million worms were exported from Canada, with a Canadian export value of $13 million and an American retail value of $54 million."


=== Circulatory system ===
Earthworms are also sold as food for human consumption. ] is a culinary term used by the ] of ] to refer to earthworms which are considered delicacies.
Earthworms have a dual circulatory system in which both the coelomic fluid and a closed circulatory system carry the food, waste, and respiratory gases. The closed circulatory system has five main blood vessels: the dorsal (top) vessel, which runs above the digestive tract; the ventral (bottom) vessel, which runs below the digestive tract; the subneural vessel, which runs below the ventral nerve cord; and two lateroneural vessels on either side of the nerve cord.{{sfn|Sims|Gerard|1985|p=10}}


The dorsal vessel is mainly a collecting structure in the intestinal region. It receives a pair commissural and dorsal intestines in each segment. The ventral vessel branches off to a pair of ventro-tegumentaries and ventro-intestinals in each segment. The subneural vessel also gives out a pair of commissurals running along the posterior surface of the septum.
A report on biodiversity published by the Irish Government in May 2008 estimated the activities of the earthworm to be worth a minimum of €723 millon per annum to Irish agriculture.


The pumping action on the dorsal vessel moves the blood forward, while the other four longitudinal vessels carry the blood rearward. In segments seven through eleven, a pair of aortic arches ring the coelom and acts as hearts, pumping the blood to the ventral vessel that acts as the aorta. The blood consists of ameboid cells and haemoglobin dissolved in the plasma. The second circulatory system derives from the cells of the digestive system that line the coelom. As the digestive cells become full, they release non-living cells of fat into the fluid-filled coelom, where they float freely but can pass through the walls separating each segment, moving food to other parts and assist in wound healing.<ref>{{cite book|author=Cleveland P. Hickman Jr.|author2=Larry S. Roberts|author3=Frances M Hickman|title=Integrated Principles of Zoology|year=1984|edition=7th|publisher=Times Mirror/Mosby College Publishing|isbn=978-0-8016-2173-4|pages=|url=https://archive.org/details/integratedprinci7ed0hick/page/344}}</ref>
==Taxonomy and main geographic origins of earthworms==
Main families :
* ] : Temperate Northern Hemisphere from Vancouver Island, Canada to Japan, mostly Eurasia.
* ] : Europe.
* ] : North America.
* ] : Africa, South America.
* ] : Central and South America, Africa.
* ] : Africa, midland and southeastern North America, Central and South America, Australia and Oceania.
* ] : Central/South America, western Africa, India, New Zealand, Australia.
* ] : Central America/Caribbean.
* ] : South East Asia, Australasia and Oceania, northwestern North America.
* ] : Central and northern South America.
* ] : Tropical Africa.


=== Excretory system ===
==References==
The excretory system contains a pair of ] in every segment, except for the first three and the last ones.<ref name=Tutorvista>{{cite web|last=Farabee|first=H.J|title=Excretory System|url=http://www.emc.maricopa.edu/faculty/farabee/biobk/biobookexcret.html|access-date=29 July 2012|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120730161917/http://www.emc.maricopa.edu/faculty/farabee/BIOBK/BioBookEXCRET.html|archive-date=30 July 2012}}</ref> The three types of nephridia are: integumentary, septal, and pharyngeal. The integumentary nephridia lie attached to the inner side of the body wall in all segments except the first two. The septal nephridia are attached to both sides of the septa behind the 15th segment. The pharyngeal nephridia are attached to the fourth, fifth and sixth segments.<ref name=Tutorvista /> The waste in the coelom fluid from a forward segment is drawn in by the beating of ] of the ]. From there it is carried through the septum (wall) via a tube which forms a series of loops entwined by blood capillaries that also transfer waste into the tubule of the nephrostome. The excretory wastes are then finally discharged through a pore on the worm's side.<ref>{{cite book|author=Cleveland P. Hickman Jr.|author2=Larry S. Roberts|author3=Frances M Hickman|title=Integrated Principles of Zoology|year=1984|edition=7th|publisher=Times Mirror/Mosby College Publishing|isbn=978-0-8016-2173-4|pages=|url=https://archive.org/details/integratedprinci7ed0hick/page/345}}</ref>
<references/>


== Further reading == === Respiration ===
Earthworms have no special respiratory organs. Gases are exchanged through the moist skin and capillaries, where the oxygen is picked up by the haemoglobin dissolved in the blood plasma and carbon dioxide is released. Water, as well as salts, can also be moved through the skin by active transport.
Edwards, Clive A. (Ed.) ''Earthworm Ecology''. Boca Raton: CRC Press, 2004. Second revised edition. ISBN 084931819X


== Life and physiology ==
Lee, Keneth E. ''Earthworms: Their Ecology and Relationships with Soils and Land Use''. Academic Press. Sydney, 1985. ISBN 0-12-440860-5
At birth, earthworms emerge small but fully formed, lacking only their sex structures which develop in about 60 to 90 days. They attain full size in about one year. Scientists predict that the average lifespan under field conditions is four to eight years, while most garden varieties live only one to two years.


=== Reproduction ===
Stewart, Amy. ''The Earth Moved: On the Remarkable Achievements of Earthworms''. Chapel Hill, N.C.: Algonquin Books, 2004. ISBN 1-56512-337-9
]
]
]

Several common earthworm species are mostly ], meaning that growth and development of ]s happens without ].
Among ] earthworms, parthenogenesis arose from sexual relatives many times.<ref name="pmid25463017">{{cite journal |vauthors=Domínguez J, Aira M, Breinholt JW, Stojanovic M, James SW, Pérez-Losada M |title=Underground evolution: New roots for the old tree of lumbricid earthworms |journal=Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. |volume=83 |pages=7–19 |year=2015 |pmid=25463017 |pmc=4766815 |doi=10.1016/j.ympev.2014.10.024 |bibcode=2015MolPE..83....7D }}</ref> Parthenogenesis in some ''Aporrectodea trapezoides'' lineages arose 6.4 to 1.1&nbsp;million years ago from sexual ancestors.<ref name="pmid22542691">{{cite journal |vauthors=Fernández R, Almodóvar A, Novo M, Simancas B, Díaz Cosín DJ |title=Adding complexity to the complex: new insights into the phylogeny, diversification and origin of parthenogenesis in the Aporrectodea caliginosa species complex (Oligochaeta, Lumbricidae) |journal=Mol. Phylogenet. Evol. |volume=64 |issue=2 |pages=368–79 |year=2012 |pmid=22542691 |doi=10.1016/j.ympev.2012.04.011 |bibcode=2012MolPE..64..368F }}</ref> A few species exhibit ] parthogenesis, meaning that mating is necessary to stimulate reproduction, even though no male genetic material passes to the offspring.<ref>Cosín D.J.D., Novo M., Fernández R. (2011) Reproduction of Earthworms: Sexual Selection and Parthenogenesis. In: Karaca A. (eds) Biology of Earthworms. Soil Biology, vol 24. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg, pp. 76ff. </ref>

Earthworm mating occurs on the surface, most often at night. Earthworms are ]s; that is, they have both male and female sexual organs. The sexual organs are located in segments 9 to 15. Earthworms have one or two pairs of testes contained within sacs. The two or four pairs of ]s produce, store and release the sperm via the male pores. Ovaries and oviducts in segment 13 release eggs via female pores on segment 14, while sperm is expelled from segment 15. One or more pairs of ]e are present in segments 9 and 10 (depending on the species) which are internal sacs that receive and store sperm from the other worm during copulation. As a result, segment 15 of one worm exudes sperm into segments 9 and 10 with its storage vesicles of its mate. Some species use external ]s for sperm transfer.

In ''Hormogaster samnitica'' and ''Hormogaster elisae'' ] DNA libraries were sequenced and two sex ]s, Attractin and Temptin, were detected in all tissue samples of both ].<ref name="pmid23596327">{{cite journal |vauthors=Novo M, Riesgo A, Fernández-Guerra A, Giribet G |title=Pheromone evolution, reproductive genes, and comparative transcriptomics in mediterranean earthworms (annelida, oligochaeta, hormogastridae) |journal=Mol. Biol. Evol. |volume=30 |issue=7 |pages=1614–29 |year=2013 |pmid=23596327 |doi=10.1093/molbev/mst074 |doi-access=free |hdl=10261/94159 |hdl-access=free }}</ref> Sex pheromones are probably important in earthworms because they live in an environment where chemical signaling may play a crucial role in attracting a partner and in facilitating outcrossing. Outcrossing would provide the benefit of masking the expression of deleterious recessive mutations in progeny<ref name="pmid3324702">{{Cite book |vauthors=Bernstein H, Hopf FA, Michod RE |title=Molecular Genetics of Development |chapter=The Molecular Basis of the Evolution of Sex |volume=24 |pages=323–70 |year=1987 |pmid=3324702 |doi= 10.1016/S0065-2660(08)60012-7|series=Advances in Genetics |isbn=978-0-12-017624-3 }}</ref> (see ]).

] and ] are separate processes in earthworms. The mating pair overlap front ends ventrally and each exchanges sperm with the other. The ] becomes very reddish to pinkish in colour. Sometime after copulation, long after the worms have separated, the clitellum (behind the spermathecae) secretes material which forms a ring around the worm. The worm then backs out of the ring, and as it does so, it injects its own eggs and the other worm's sperm into it. Thus each worm becomes the genetic father of some of their offspring (due to its own sperm transferred to other earthworm) and the genetic mother (offsprings from its own egg cells) of the rest. As the worm slips out of the ring, the ends of the cocoon seal to form a vaguely onion-shaped incubator (]) in which the embryonic worms develop. Hence fertilization is external. The cocoon is then deposited in the soil. After three weeks, 2 to 20 offspring hatch with an average of four.{{citation needed|date=November 2024}} Development is direct i.e. without formation of any larva.{{citation needed|date=November 2024}}

===DNA repair===

Exposure of the earthworm '']'' to ] induced ].<ref name = Hertel-Aas2011>{{cite journal |vauthors=Hertel-Aas T, Oughton DH, Jaworska A, Brunborg G |title=Induction and repair of DNA strand breaks and oxidised bases in somatic and spermatogenic cells from the earthworm Eisenia fetida after exposure to ionising radiation |journal=Mutagenesis |volume=26 |issue=6 |pages=783–93 |date=November 2011 |pmid=21825113 |doi=10.1093/mutage/ger048 |url=}}</ref> These DNA damages could then be ] in somatic and spermatogenic cells.<ref name = Hertel-Aas2011/> Earthworms testis cells are also capable of repairing ] induced oxidative DNA adducts.<ref>{{cite journal |vauthors=Chang WS, Tsai CW, Lin CC, Lin CH, Shen WC, Lin SS, Bau DT |title=Earthworms repair H2O2-induced oxidative DNA adducts without removing UV-induced pyrimidine dimers |journal=In Vivo |volume=25 |issue=6 |pages=977–81 |date=2011 |pmid=22021692 |doi= |url=}}</ref>

=== Locomotion ===
]
Earthworms travel underground by means of waves of muscular contractions which alternately shorten and lengthen the body (]). The shortened part is anchored to the surrounding soil by tiny clawlike bristles (]e) set along its segmented length. In all the body segments except the first, last and clitellum, there is a ring of S-shaped setae embedded in the epidermal pit of each segment (perichaetine). The whole burrowing process is aided by the secretion of lubricating mucus. As a result of their movement through their lubricated tunnels, worms can make gurgling noises underground when disturbed. Earthworms move through soil by expanding crevices with force; when forces are measured according to body weight, hatchlings can push 500 times their own body weight whereas large adults can push only 10 times their own body weight.<ref name="Quillan 2000">{{cite journal|year=2000|journal=Journal of Experimental Biology|volume=203|issue=Pt 18|pages=2757–2770|author=Quillan, K.J.|title=Ontogenetic scaling of burrowing forces in the earthworm Lumbricus terrestris|doi=10.1242/jeb.203.18.2757|url=http://jeb.biologists.org/content/203/18/2757.full.pdf+html|access-date=April 4, 2015|pmid=10952876}}</ref>

=== Regeneration ===
Earthworms have the ability to ] lost segments, but this ability varies between species and depends on the extent of the damage. Stephenson (1930) devoted a chapter of his monograph to this topic, while ] spent 20 years studying regeneration in a variety of species. But "because little interest was shown", Gates (1972)<!-- is this Gates GE. 1972. Burmese earthworms: an introduction to the systematics and biology of Megadrile oligochaetes with special reference to Southeast Asia. Trans. Amer. Phil. Soc. 62: 1-326.? --> published only a few of his findings. These nevertheless show it is theoretically possible to grow two whole worms from a bisected specimen in certain species.

Gates's reports included:
*'']'' <small>(], 1826)</small> with head regeneration, in an anterior direction, possible at each intersegmental level back to and including 23/24, while tails were regenerated at any levels behind 20/21; thus two worms may grow from one.<ref name=biolbull />
*'']'' <small>(], ])</small> replacing anterior segments from as far back as 13/14 and 16/17 but tail regeneration was never found.
*'']'' <small>(Perrier, 1872)</small> readily regenerated lost parts of the body, in an anterior direction from as far back as 17/18, and in a posterior direction as far forward as 20/21.
*'']'' <small>(Kinberg, 1867)</small> with regeneration in anterior direction at all levels back to 25/26 and tail regeneration from 30/31; head regeneration was sometimes believed to be caused by internal amputation resulting from '']'' sp. larval infestation.
*'']'' <small>(Hoffmeister, 1845)</small> also has prodigious regenerative capacity with 'head' regeneration from as far back as 40/41.<ref name=Hoffmeister />

An unidentified Tasmanian earthworm shown growing a replacement head has been reported.<ref name=secondhead />

== Taxonomy and distribution ==
Within the world of taxonomy, the stable 'Classical System' of Michaelsen (1900) and Stephenson (1930) was gradually eroded by the controversy over how to classify earthworms, such that Fender and McKey-Fender (1990) went so far as to say, "The family-level classification of the ] earthworms is in chaos."<ref name=soilbio /> Over the years, many scientists have developed their own classification systems for earthworms, which led to confusion, and these systems have been and still continue to be revised and updated. The classification system used here which was developed by Blakemore (2000), is a modern reversion to the Classical System that is historically proven and widely accepted.<ref name=blakemore2006 />

Categorization of a ] earthworm into one of its taxonomic families under suborders ] and ] is based on such features as the makeup of the clitellum, the location and disposition of the sex features (pores, prostatic glands, etc.), number of gizzards, and body shape.<ref name=blakemore2006 /> Currently, over 6,000 species of terrestrial earthworms are named, as provided in a species name database,<ref name=ewdatabase /> but the number of synonyms is unknown.

The families, with their known distributions or origins:<ref name=blakemore2006 />
* ]
* ] – the Pyrenees and the southeast USA
* ] – tropical equatorial (South America, Africa, Indo-Asia)
* ] – Ethiopian, Neotropical (a possible subfamily of Octochaetidae)
* ] – southwestern Palaearctic: Europe, Middle East, Russia and Siberia to Pacific coast; Japan (Biwadrilus); mainly aquatic
* ]/-idae – Gondwanan or Laurasian? (a subfamily of Acanthodrilidae)
* ] – cosmopolitan but uncommon in tropics (usually classed with Microdriles)
* ] – Tropical Africa south of the Sahara
* ] – Neotropical: Central America and the Caribbean
* ] – Neotropical: Central and South America, Caribbean
* ] – cosmopolitan distribution (usually classed with Microdriles)
* ] – Mediterranean
* ] – Malagasian: Madagascar
* ] – Holarctic: North America, Europe, Middle East, Central Asia to Japan
* ] – Louisiana the southeast USA
* ]
* ] – Terrestrial in Africa especially South African grasslands
* ] – Oriental and Indian subregion
* ] – Neotropics, Africa; India
* ] – Australasian, Indian, Oriental, Ethiopian, Neotropical
* ] – Australasian, Indian, Oriental (subfamily if Benhamiinae is accepted)
* ] – Nearctic, Neotropical: North and Central America
* ] – Colombia, South America

=== As an invasive species ===
{{Main|Earthworms as invasive species|Invasive earthworms of North America}}
From a total of around 7,000 species, only about 150 species are widely distributed around the world. These are the peregrine or cosmopolitan earthworms.<ref name=cosmo3 />
Of the 182 taxa of earthworms found in the United States and Canada, 60 (33%) are introduced species.

== Ecology ==
]
Earthworms are classified into three main ecophysiological categories: (1) ]- or compost-dwelling worms that are nonburrowing, live at the soil-litter interface and eat decomposing organic matter (]) e.g. ''Eisenia fetida''; (2) topsoil- or subsoil-dwelling worms that feed (on soil), burrow and cast within the soil, creating horizontal burrows in upper 10–30&nbsp; cm of soil (]); and (3) worms that construct permanent deep vertical burrows which they use to visit the surface to obtain plant material for food, such as leaves (], meaning "reaching up"), e.g. ''Lumbricus terrestris''.<ref name=ucdavis />

Earthworm populations depend on both physical and chemical properties of the soil, such as temperature, moisture, pH, salts, ], and texture, as well as available food, and the ability of the species to reproduce and disperse. One of the most important environmental factors is ], but earthworms vary in their preferences. Most favour neutral to slightly acidic soils. ''Lumbricus terrestris'' is still present in a pH of 5.4, '']'' at a pH of 4.3 and some ] are present in extremely acidic humic soils. Soil pH may also influence the numbers of worms that go into ]. The more acidic the soil, the sooner worms go into diapause, and remain in diapause the longest time at a pH of 6.4.

Earthworms are preyed upon by many species of ]s (e.g. robins, ]s, ], ]s, ]s), snakes, wood turtles, mammals (e.g. ]s, boars, ]es, ]s, ]s, ]<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Gould|first1=Edwin|last2=McShea|first2=William|last3=Grand|first3=Theodore|date=1993|title=Function of the Star in the Star-Nosed Mole, Condylura cristata|journal=Journal of Mammalogy|volume=74|issue=1|pages=108–116|doi=10.2307/1381909|jstor=1381909|issn=0022-2372}}</ref>) and invertebrates (e.g. ]s,<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Dejean|first1=A.|last2=Schatx|first2=B.|date=1999|title=Prey Capture Behavior of Psalidomyrmex procerus (Formicidae; Ponerinae), a Specialist Predator of Earthworms (Annelida)|journal=Sociobiology|pages=545–554|issn=0361-6525}}</ref> ], ]s and other ]s, ]s, ]s, and ]s). Earthworms have many internal ]s, including ], platyhelminthes, mites, and ]s; they can be found in the worms' ], ]s, ], or ], or in their ] (e.g. the mite ''Histiostoma murchiei'' is a parasite of earthworm cocoons<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Oliver |first=James H. |date=1962 |title=A Mite Parasitic in the Cocoons of Earthworms |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/3275424 |journal=The Journal of Parasitology |volume=48 |issue=1 |pages=120–123 |doi=10.2307/3275424 |jstor=3275424 |pmid=14481811 |issn=0022-3395}}</ref>).

The earthworm activity aerates and mixes the soil, and is conducive to mineralization of nutrients and their uptake by vegetation. Certain species of earthworm come to the surface and graze on the higher concentrations of organic matter present there, mixing it with the mineral soil. Because a high level of organic matter mixing is associated with ], an abundance of earthworms is generally considered beneficial by farmers and gardeners.<ref name=dpi>NSW Department of Primary Industries, {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170807114105/http://www.dpi.nsw.gov.au/agriculture/soils/biology/earthworms |date=2017-08-07 }}</ref><ref name=aggie>Galveston County Master Gardener Association, </ref> As long ago as 1881 ] wrote: "It may be doubted whether there are many other animals which have played so important a part in the history of the world, as have these lowly organized creatures."<ref name=darwin />

]'' preying on ''Lumbricus'' sp.]]
Also, while, as the name suggests, the main habitat of earthworms is in soil, they are not restricted to this habitat. The brandling worm '']'' lives in decaying plant matter and manure. '']'' from ] and the ] is generally found in decaying conifer logs. '']'', '']'' spp., and several others are found in mud in streams. Some species are arboreal,<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Gaume |first1=Laurence |last2=Shenoy |first2=Megha |last3=Zacharias |first3=Merry |last4=Borges |first4=Renee M. |date=May 2006 |title=Co-existence of ants and an arboreal earthworm in a myrmecophyte of the Indian Western Ghats: anti-predation effect of the earthworm mucus |url=https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/journal-of-tropical-ecology/article/abs/coexistence-of-ants-and-an-arboreal-earthworm-in-a-myrmecophyte-of-the-indian-western-ghats-antipredation-effect-of-the-earthworm-mucus/7AD4C86F34A967120FFC83B156DC2D1F |journal=Journal of Tropical Ecology |language=en |volume=22 |issue=3 |pages=341–344 |doi=10.1017/S0266467405003111 |issn=1469-7831}}</ref> some aquatic and some ] (salt-water tolerant) and ] (living on the sea-shore, e.g. '']'').<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/240435104 | title=Origin and means of dispersal of cosmopolitan ''Pontodrilus litoralis'' (Oligochaeta: Megascolecidae) | publisher=European Journal of Soil Biology| author=Blakemore, R.J. (2007)}}</ref> Even in the soil species, special habitats, such as soils derived from ], have an earthworm fauna of their own.

] of organic "wastes" and addition of this organic matter to the soil, preferably as a surface ], will provide several species of earthworms with their food and nutrient requirements, and will create the optimum conditions of temperature and moisture that will stimulate their activity.

Earthworms are environmental indicators of ]. Earthworms feed on the decaying matter in the soil and analyzing the contents of their digestive tracts gives insight into the overall condition of the soil. The earthworm gut accumulates chemicals, including heavy metals such as ], ], ], and ]. The population size of the earthworm indicates the quality of the soil, as healthy soil would contain a larger number of earthworms.<ref>{{Citation|last1=Fründ|first1=Heinz-Christian|title=Earthworms as Bioindicators of Soil Quality|date=2011|url=http://link.springer.com/10.1007/978-3-642-14636-7_16|work=Biology of Earthworms|volume=24|pages=261–278|editor-last=Karaca|editor-first=Ayten|place=Berlin, Heidelberg|publisher=Springer Berlin Heidelberg|doi=10.1007/978-3-642-14636-7_16|isbn=978-3-642-14635-0|access-date=2021-02-18|last2=Graefe|first2=Ulfert|last3=Tischer|first3=Sabine|series=Soil Biology }}</ref>

=== Environmental impacts ===
The major benefits of earthworm activities to soil fertility for agriculture can be summarized as:
* '''Biological''': In many soils, earthworms play a major role in the conversion of large pieces of organic matter into rich ], thus improving soil fertility. This is achieved by the worm's actions of pulling below the surface deposited organic matter such as leaf fall or manure, either for food or to plug its burrow. Once in the burrow, the worm will shred the leaf, partially digest it and mingle it with the earth. Worm casts (see bottom right) can contain 40 percent more humus than the top {{convert|9|in}} of soil in which the worm is living.<ref name="brady">{{cite book|author1=Nyle C. Brady |author2=Ray R. Weil |title =Elements of the Nature and Properties of Soils|publisher =Prentice Hall|year =2009|isbn =978-0-13-501433-2|edition=3rd }}</ref>
] in the form of casts]]
* '''Chemical''': In addition to dead ], the earthworm also ingests any other soil particles that are small enough—including sand grains up to {{convert|1/20|in|mm}}—into its gizzard, wherein those minute fragments of grit grind everything into a fine paste which is then digested in the intestine. When the worm excretes this in the form of casts, deposited on the surface or deeper in the soil, minerals and plant nutrients are changed to an accessible form for plants to use. Investigations in the United States show that fresh earthworm casts are five times richer in available ], seven times richer in available ]s, and 11 times richer in available ] than the surrounding upper {{convert|6|in|mm}} of soil. In conditions where humus is plentiful, the weight of casts produced may be greater than {{convert|4.5|kg|lb}} per worm per year<!-- subjective , and is in itself an indicator of why it pays the gardener or farmer to keep worm populations high-->.<ref name="brady" />
* '''Physical''': The earthworm's burrowing creates a multitude of channels through the soil and is of great value in maintaining the ], enabling processes of aeration and drainage.<ref>{{Cite web|last=Lines-Kelly|first=Rebecca|date=2021|title=How earthworms can help your soil|url=https://www.dpi.nsw.gov.au/agriculture/soils/guides/soil-biology/earthworms|url-status=live|access-date=2021-11-30|website=www.dpi.nsw.gov.au|language=en|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211008175255/https://www.dpi.nsw.gov.au/agriculture/soils/guides/soil-biology/earthworms |archive-date=2021-10-08 }}</ref> ] co-founder ] points out that by sliding in their tunnels, earthworms "act as an innumerable army of pistons pumping air in and out of the soils on a 24-hour cycle (more rapidly at night)".<ref name=Mollison /> Thus, the earthworm not only creates passages for air and water to traverse the soil, but also modifies the vital organic component that makes a soil healthy (see ]). Earthworms promote the formation of nutrient-rich casts (globules of soil, stable in soil mucus) that have high soil aggregation and soil fertility and quality.<ref name="brady" /> In ] soils, earthworms can obliterate the characteristic banded appearance of the soil profile by mixing the organic (LFH), eluvial (E) and upper illuvial (B) horizons to create a single dark Ap horizon.<ref>{{cite journal|url=https://harvardforest.fas.harvard.edu/sites/harvardforest.fas.harvard.edu/files/publications/pdfs/Fisher_Ecology_1928.pdf |title=Soil Changes and Silviculture on the Harvard Forest|author=R. T. Fisher|journal=Ecology|volume=9|issue=1|date=January 1928|pages=6–11|doi=10.2307/1929537 |jstor=1929537 |bibcode=1928Ecol....9....6F |access-date=2022-03-19}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal|url=https://www.nrcresearchpress.com/doi/pdf/10.4141/cjss64-005|first=K. K.|last=Langmaid|title=Some Effects of Earthworm Invasion in Virgin Podzols |date=1 February 1964|journal=Canadian Journal of Soil Science|volume=44|issue=1|pages=34–37|access-date=19 March 2022|doi=10.4141/cjss64-005}}</ref>

Earthworms accelerate nutrient cycling in the soil-plant system through fragmentation & mixing of plant debris – physical grinding & chemical digestion.<ref name="brady" /> The earthworm's existence cannot be taken for granted. Dr. ] observed "tremendous numerical differences between adjacent gardens", and worm populations are affected by a host of environmental factors, many of which can be influenced by good management practices on the part of the gardener or farmer.<ref name=cooper />

Darwin estimated that ] contains up to {{convert|53,000|/acre}} of worms, but more recent research has produced figures suggesting that even poor soil may support {{convert|250,000|/acre}}, whilst rich fertile farmland may have up to {{convert|1,750,000|/acre}}, meaning that the weight of earthworms beneath a farmer's soil could be greater than that of the livestock upon its surface. Richly organic topsoil populations of earthworms are much higher – averaging {{convert|500|/m2}} and up to 400 g2{{dubious|date=October 2022}} – such that, for the 7&nbsp;billion of us, each person alive today has support of 7&nbsp;million earthworms.<ref name=blakemore2017>{{cite web | url=https://vermecology.wordpress.com/2017/02/12/nature-article-to-commemorate-charles-darwins-birthday-on-12th-feb/ | title=Nature article to commemorate Charles Darwin's birthday on 12th February | publisher=VermEcology | author=Blakemore, R.J. (2017)| date=2017-02-12 }}</ref>

The ability to break down organic materials and excrete concentrated nutrients makes the earthworm a functional contributor in restoration projects. In response to ecosystem disturbances, some sites have utilized earthworms to prepare soil for the return of native flora. Research from the ] asserts that the earthworms positively influence the rate of macroaggregate formation, an important feature for soil structure.<ref name=":0">{{Cite journal|title = Restoration by earthworms (megascolecidae) of the macroaggregate structure of a destructured savanna soil under field conditions|journal = Soil Biology and Biochemistry|date = 1992-12-01|pages = 1587–1594|volume = 24|issue = 12|doi = 10.1016/0038-0717(92)90155-Q|first = Eric|last = Blanchart| bibcode=1992SBiBi..24.1587B }}</ref> The stability of aggregates in response to water was also found to be improved when constructed by earthworms.<ref name=":0" />

Though not fully quantified yet, ] of earthworms likely contribute to global warming, especially since top-dwelling earthworms increase the speed of carbon cycles and have been spread by humans into many new geographies.<ref>{{Cite news|last=Burke|first=David|date=December 26, 2019|title=The power of earthworm poop and how it could influence climate change|work=CBC|url=https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/nova-scotia/earthworms-climate-change-carbon-research-1.5370724}}</ref>

== Threats ==
{{See also|Biodiversity loss#Earthworms}}
Nitrogenous fertilizers tend to create ], which are fatal to the worms, and dead specimens are often found on the surface following the application of substances such as ], ], and ]. In Australia, changes in farming practices such as the application of ]s on ]s and a switch from ] to ] had a devastating effect on populations of the giant ], leading to their classification as a ]. Globally, certain earthworms populations have been devastated by deviation from organic production and the spraying of synthetic fertilizers and biocides, with at least three species now listed as extinct, but many more endangered.<ref name="blakemore2018">{{cite journal |author=Blakemore, R.J. (2018) |year=2018 |title=Critical Decline of Earthworms from Organic Origins under Intensive, Humic SOM-Depleting Agriculture |journal=Soil Systems |publisher=Soil Systems 2(2): 33 |volume=2 |issue=2 |pages=33 |doi=10.3390/soilsystems2020033 |doi-access=free}}</ref>

== Economic impact ==
] in Mexico]]
Various species of worms are used in ], the practice of feeding organic waste to earthworms to decompose food waste. These are usually '']'' (or its close relative '']'') or the brandling worm, commonly known as the tiger worm or red wiggler. They are distinct from soil-dwelling earthworms. In the tropics, the African nightcrawler '']''<ref name=blakemore2015>{{cite web | url=http://africaninvertebrates.org/ojs/index.php/AI/article/viewFile/395/421 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161022191344/http://africaninvertebrates.org/ojs/index.php/AI/article/viewFile/395/421 | url-status=dead | archive-date=2016-10-22 | title=Eco-taxonomic profile of the iconic vermicomposter - the 'African Nightcrawler', ''Eudrilus eugeniae'' (Kinberg, 1867) | publisher=African Invertebrates 56: 527-548| author=Blakemore, R.J. (2015)}}</ref> and the Indian blue '']'' are used.

Earthworms are sold all over the world; the market is sizable. According to Doug Collicutt, "In 1980, 370 million worms were exported from Canada, with a Canadian export value of $13 million and an American retail value of $54 million."<ref>{{cite web |last1=Collicutt |first1=Doug |title=Biology of the Night Crawler (Lumbricus terrestris) |url=http://www.naturenorth.com/fall/ncrawler/Night_Crawlers_03.html |website=NatureNorth |access-date=5 June 2022}}</ref>

Earthworms provide an excellent source of protein for fish, fowl, and pigs, but have also been used traditionally for human consumption. ] is a culinary term used by the ] of New Zealand to refer to earthworms, which they consider delicacies for their chiefs.


== See also == == See also ==
* ], the part of the soil influenced by earthworm secretions and castings
*]
* '']'', an 1881 book by Charles Darwin
*]
*] * ]
*] * ]
*] * ]
*] * ]
*] * ]

*] and its reference to peregrine earthworm Pontoscolex corethrurus
== References ==
*]
{{Reflist|refs=
<ref name=biolbull>{{cite journal |last1=Gates |first1=G. E. |title=Regeneration in an Earthworm, Eisenia Foetida (Savigny) 1826. I. Anterior Regeneration |journal=The Biological Bulletin |date=April 1949 |volume=96 |issue=2 |pages=129–139 |doi=10.2307/1538195 |url=http://www.biolbull.org/cgi/reprint/96/2/129.pdf |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070401005634/http://www.biolbull.org/cgi/reprint/96/2/129.pdf |archive-date=2007-04-01 |url-status=dead|jstor=1538195 |pmid=18120625 }}</ref>

<ref name=blakemore2006>{{cite web | url=http://www.annelida.net/earthworm/Introductory%20Key%20to%20the%20Revised%20Families%20of%20Earthworms.pdf | title=Revised Key to Worldwide Earthworm Families from Blakemore (2000) plus Reviews of Criodrilidae (including Biwadrilidae) and Octochaetidae | publisher=annelida.net | website=A Series of Searchable Texts on Earthworm Biodiversity, Ecology and Systematics from Various Regions of the World | date=March 2006 | access-date=May 15, 2012 | author=Blakemore, R.J. (2006)}}</ref>

<ref name=cooper>Cooper, Shewell; ''Soil, Humus And Health'' {{ISBN|978-0-583-12796-7}}</ref>

<ref name=cosmo3></ref>

<ref name=darwin>{{cite book|last=Darwin|first=Charles|author-link=Charles Darwin|title=The Formation of Vegetable Mould through the Action of Worms, with Observations on their Habits|date=1881|publisher=]|title-link=The Formation of Vegetable Mould through the Action of Worms, with Observations on their Habits}} Found at </ref>

<!-- ref name="Edwards2004">{{cite book|author=Clive A. Edwards|title=Earthworm Ecology|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=7mHvxY-1BKsC|access-date=6 September 2013|date=29 March 2004|publisher=Taylor & Francis|isbn=978-1-4200-3971-9}}</ref -->

<ref name=Hoffmeister>{{cite journal|jstor=2422100|title=On Regenerative Capacity of Earthworms of the Family Lumbricidae|first=G. E.|last=Gates|date=1 January 1953|journal=The American Midland Naturalist|volume=50|issue=2|pages=414–419|doi=10.2307/2422100}}</ref>

<!-- <ref name=ITIS_NODC>{{cite web | url=https://www.itis.gov/servlet/SingleRpt/SingleRpt?search_topic=TSN&search_value=69069 | title=ITIS Report for Lumbricina, Taxonomic Serial No.: 69069 | publisher=ITIS | access-date=May 14, 2012}}</ref> -->

<ref name=Mollison>Mollison, Bill, ''Permaculture- A Designer's Manual'', Tagari Press, 1988</ref>

<ref name=secondhead>{{cite web|url=http://www.qvmag.tas.gov.au/zoology/invertebrata/printarchive/printtext/inv20aitems.html#20blakemore|title=Invertebrata 20a items|access-date=2006-11-20|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060622131046/http://www.qvmag.tas.gov.au/zoology/invertebrata/printarchive/printtext/inv20aitems.html#20blakemore|archive-date=2006-06-22|url-status=dead}}</ref>

<ref name=soilbio>{{cite book | title=Soil Biology Guide | publisher=Wiley-Interscience | author=Fender & McKey-Fender | year=1990 | isbn=978-0-471-04551-9}}</ref>

<ref name=ucdavis> {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070713122050/http://www.sarep.ucdavis.edu/NEWSLTR/v3n1/sa-9.htm |date=2007-07-13 }}</ref>

<ref name=ewdatabase>{{Cite web|url=http://earthworms.elte.hu/|title=Earthworms|website=Earthworms.elte.hu|access-date=19 March 2022}}</ref>
}}

===Works cited===
* {{cite book |last1=Blakemore |first1=Robert J. |title=Cosmopolitan Earthworms – an Eco-Taxonomic Guide to the Peregrine Species of the World. (5th Ed) |publisher=VermEcology |year=2012 |location=Yokohama, Japan}}
* {{cite book |last1=Edwards |first1=Clive A. |last2=Bohlen |first2=P. J. |title=Biology and Ecology of Earthworms |date=1996 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ad4rDwD_GhsC |publisher=Springer Science & Business Media |isbn=978-0-412-56160-3 |language=en}}
* {{cite book |last1=Sims |first1=Reginald William |last2=Gerard |first2=B |title=Earthworms: Keys and Notes for the Identification and Study of the Species |publisher=Published for ] and the Estuarine and Brackish-Water Sciences Association by E. J. Brill/Dr. W. Backhuys |year=1985 |location=London}}

== Further reading ==
* Edwards, Clive A. (ed.) ''Earthworm Ecology''. Boca Raton: CRC Press, 2004. Second revised edition. {{ISBN|0-8493-1819-X}}
* Lee, Keneth E. ''Earthworms: Their Ecology and Relationships with Soils and Land Use''. Academic Press. Sydney, 1985. {{ISBN|0-12-440860-5}}
* Stewart, Amy. ''The Earth Moved: On the Remarkable Achievements of Earthworms''. Chapel Hill, N.C.: Algonquin Books, 2004. {{ISBN|1-56512-337-9}}

== External links ==
* {{Commons-inline}}
* {{Wikispecies inline|Lumbricina}}
* {{Cite EB1911|wstitle=Earthworm}}


{{Taxonbar|from=Q124378}}
==External links==
{{Authority control}}
{{commons|Earthworms}}
* A great informational website and magazine
*
* Good for Composting and Fishing
*
*
*
*
*
*
* Canadian worm awareness and appreciation site, with detailed worm anatomy.
* Minnesota DNR information on the negative impacts of earthworms
*
*
*
*
* hosted by the
*
*
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Latest revision as of 20:14, 17 December 2024

Terrestrial invertebrate, order Opisthopora

Earthworm
Temporal range: 209–0 Ma PreꞒ O S D C P T J K Pg N
An unidentified earthworm species with a well-developed clitellum
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Annelida
Clade: Pleistoannelida
Clade: Sedentaria
Class: Clitellata
Order: Opisthopora
Suborder: Lumbricina

An earthworm is a soil-dwelling terrestrial invertebrate that belongs to the phylum Annelida. The term is the common name for the largest members of the class (or subclass, depending on the author) Oligochaeta. In classical systems, they were in the order of Opisthopora since the male pores opened posterior to the female pores, although the internal male segments are anterior to the female. Theoretical cladistic studies have placed them in the suborder Lumbricina of the order Haplotaxida, but this may change. Other slang names for earthworms include "dew-worm", "rainworm", "nightcrawler", and "angleworm" (from its use as angling hookbaits). Larger terrestrial earthworms are also called megadriles (which translates to "big worms") as opposed to the microdriles ("small worms") in the semiaquatic families Tubificidae, Lumbricidae and Enchytraeidae. The megadriles are characterized by a distinct clitellum (more extensive than that of microdriles) and a vascular system with true capillaries.

Earthworms are commonly found in moist, compost-rich soil, eating a wide variety of organic matters, which include detritus, living protozoa, rotifers, nematodes, bacteria, fungi and other microorganisms. An earthworm's digestive system runs the length of its body. They are one of nature's most important detritivores and coprophages, and also serve as food for many low-level consumers within the ecosystems.

Earthworms exhibit an externally segmented tube-within-a-tube body plan with corresponding internal segmentations, and usually have setae on all segments. They have a cosmopolitan distribution wherever soil, water and temperature conditions allow. They have a double transport system made of coelomic fluid that moves within the fluid-filled coelom and a simple, closed circulatory system, and respire (breathe) via cutaneous respiration. As soft-bodied invertebrates, they lack a true skeleton, but their structure is maintained by fluid-filled coelom chambers that function as a hydrostatic skeleton.

Earthworms have a central nervous system consisting of two ganglia above the mouth, one on either side, connected to an axial nerve running along its length to motor neurons and sensory cells in each segment. Large numbers of chemoreceptors concentrate near its mouth. Circumferential and longitudinal muscles edging each segment let the worm move. Similar sets of muscles line the gut tube, and their actions propel digested food toward the worm's anus.

Earthworms are hermaphrodites: each worm carries male and female reproductive organs and genital pores. When mating, two individual earthworms will exchange sperm and fertilize each other's ova.

Anatomy

Form and function

Earthworm head

Depending on the species, an adult earthworm can be from 10 mm (0.39 in) long and 1 mm (0.039 in) wide to 3 m (9.8 ft) long and over 25 mm (0.98 in) wide, but the typical Lumbricus terrestris grows to about 360 mm (14 in) long. Probably the longest worm on confirmed records is Amynthas mekongianus that extends up to 3 m (10 ft) in the mud along the banks of the 4,350 km (2,703 mi) Mekong River in Southeast Asia.

From front to back, the basic shape of the earthworm is a cylindrical tube-in-a-tube, divided into a series of segments (called metameres) that compartmentalize the body. Furrows are generally externally visible on the body demarking the segments; dorsal pores and nephridiopores exude a fluid that moistens and protects the worm's surface, allowing it to breathe. Except for the mouth and anal segments, each segment carries bristlelike hairs called lateral setae used to anchor parts of the body during movement; species may have four pairs of setae on each segment or more than eight sometimes forming a complete circle of setae per segment. Special ventral setae are used to anchor mating earthworms by their penetration into the bodies of their mates.

Generally, within a species, the number of segments found is consistent across specimens, and individuals are born with the number of segments they will have throughout their lives. The first body segment (segment number 1) features both the earthworm's mouth and, overhanging the mouth, a fleshy lobe called the prostomium, which seals the entrance when the worm is at rest, but is also used to feel and chemically sense the worm's surroundings. Some species of earthworm can even use the prehensile prostomium to grab and drag items such as grasses and leaves into their burrow.

An adult earthworm develops a belt-shaped glandular swelling, called the clitellum, which covers several segments toward the front part of the animal. This is part of the reproductive system and produces egg capsules. The posterior is most commonly cylindrical like the rest of the body, but depending on the species, it may also be quadrangular, octagonal, trapezoidal, or flattened. The last segment is called the periproct; the earthworm's anus, a short vertical slit, is found on this segment.

A segment of an earthworm posterior to the clitellum including all of the segmental structures
A segment of an earthworm posterior to the clitellum including all of the segmental structures

The exterior of an individual segment is a thin cuticle over the skin, commonly pigmented red to brown, which has specialized cells that secrete mucus over the cuticle to keep the body moist and ease movement through the soil. Under the skin is a layer of nerve tissue, and two layers of muscles—a thin outer layer of circular muscle, and a much thicker inner layer of longitudinal muscle. Interior to the muscle layer is a fluid-filled chamber called a coelom that by its pressurization provides structure to the worm's boneless body. The segments are separated from each other by septa (the plural of "septum") which are perforated transverse walls, allowing the coelomic fluid to pass between segments. A pair of structures called nephrostomes are located at the back of each septum; a nephric tubule leads from each nephrostome through the septum and into the following segment. This tubule then leads to the main body fluid filtering organ, the nephridium or metanephridium, which removes metabolic waste from the coelomic fluid and expels it through pores called nephridiopores on the worm's sides; usually, two nephridia (sometimes more) are found in most segments. At the centre of a worm is the digestive tract, which runs straight through from mouth to anus without coiling, and is flanked above and below by blood vessels (the dorsal blood vessel and the ventral blood vessel as well as a subneural blood vessel) and the ventral nerve cord, and is surrounded in each segment by a pair of pallial blood vessels that connect the dorsal to the subneural blood vessels.

Many earthworms can eject coelomic fluid through pores in the back in response to stress; the Australian Didymogaster sylvaticus (known as the "blue squirter earthworm") can squirt fluid as high as 30 cm (12 in).

Nervous system

Nervous system of the anterior end of an earthworm

Central nervous system

The CNS consists of a bilobed brain (cerebral ganglia, or supra-pharyngeal ganglion), sub-pharyngeal ganglia, circum-pharyngeal connectives and a ventral nerve cord.

Earthworms' brains consist of a pair of pear-shaped cerebral ganglia. These are located in the dorsal side of the alimentary canal in the third segment, in a groove between the buccal cavity and pharynx.

A pair of circum-pharyngeal connectives from the brain encircle the pharynx and then connect with a pair of sub-pharyngeal ganglia located below the pharynx in the fourth segment. This arrangement means the brain, sub-pharyngeal ganglia and the circum-pharyngeal connectives form a nerve ring around the pharynx.

The ventral nerve cord (formed by nerve cells and nerve fibers) begins at the sub-pharyngeal ganglia and extends below the alimentary canal to the most posterior body segment. The ventral nerve cord has a swelling, or ganglion, in each segment, i.e. a segmental ganglion, which occurs from the fifth to the last segment of the body. There are also three giant axons, one medial giant axon (MGA) and two lateral giant axons (LGAs) on the mid-dorsal side of the ventral nerve cord. The MGA is 0.07 mm in diameter and transmits in an anterior-posterior direction at a rate of 32.2 m/s. The LGAs are slightly narrower at 0.05 mm in diameter and transmit in a posterior-anterior direction at 12.6 m/s. The two LGAs are connected at regular intervals along the body and are therefore considered one giant axon.

Peripheral nervous system

  • Eight to ten nerves arise from the cerebral ganglia to supply the prostomium, buccal chamber and pharynx.
  • Three pairs of nerves arise from the subpharyangeal ganglia to supply the second, third and fourth segment.
  • Three pairs of nerves extend from each segmental ganglion to supply various structures of the segment.

The sympathetic nervous system consists of nerve plexuses in the epidermis and alimentary canal. (A plexus is a web of connected nerve cells.) The nerves that run along the body wall pass between the outer circular and inner longitudinal muscle layers of the wall. They give off branches that form the intermuscular plexus and the subepidermal plexus. These nerves connect with the cricopharyngeal connective.

Movement

A profile SEM image of Lumbricus terrestris setae, small bristle-like projections that facilitate movement by anchoring the earthworm in the soil.  
An earthworm crawling over asphalt.

On the surface, crawling speed varies both within and among individuals. Earthworms crawl faster primarily by taking longer "strides" and a greater frequency of strides. Larger Lumbricus terrestris worms crawl at a greater absolute speed than smaller worms. They achieve this by taking slightly longer strides but with slightly lower stride frequencies.

Touching an earthworm, which causes a "pressure" response as well as (often) a response to the dehydrating quality of the salt on human skin (toxic to earthworms), stimulates the subepidermal nerve plexus which connects to the intermuscular plexus and causes the longitudinal muscles to contract. This causes the writhing movements observed when a human picks up an earthworm. This behaviour is a reflex and does not require the CNS; it occurs even if the nerve cord is removed. Each segment of the earthworm has its own nerve plexus. The plexus of one segment is not connected directly to that of adjacent segments. The nerve cord is required to connect the nervous systems of the segments.

The giant axons carry the fastest signals along the nerve cord. These are emergency signals that initiate reflex escape behaviours. The larger dorsal giant axon conducts signals the fastest, from the rear to the front of the animal. If the rear of the worm is touched, a signal is rapidly sent forwards causing the longitudinal muscles in each segment to contract. This causes the worm to shorten very quickly as an attempt to escape from a predator or other potential threat. The two medial giant axons connect with each other and send signals from the front to the rear. Stimulation of these causes the earthworm to very quickly retreat (perhaps contracting into its burrow to escape a bird).

The presence of a nervous system is essential for an animal to be able to experience nociception or pain. However, other physiological capacities are also required such as opioid sensitivity and central modulation of responses by analgesics. Enkephalin and α-endorphin-like substances have been found in earthworms. Injections of naloxone (an opioid antagonist) inhibit the escape responses of earthworms. This indicates that opioid substances play a role in sensory modulation, similar to that found in many vertebrates.

Sensory reception

Photosensitivity

See also: Photosensitivity

Although some worms have eyes, earthworms do not. However, they do have specialized photosensitive cells called "light cells of Hess". These photoreceptor cells have a central intracellular cavity (phaosome) filled with microvilli. As well as the microvilli, there are several sensory cilia in the phaosome which are structurally independent of the microvilli. The photoreceptors are distributed in most parts of the epidermis, but are more concentrated on the back and sides of the worm. A relatively small number occur on the ventral surface of the first segment. They are most numerous in the prostomium, and reduce in density in the first three segments; they are very few in number past the third segment.

Epidermal receptor (Sense organ)

These receptors are abundant and distributed all over the epidermis. Each receptor shows a slightly elevated cuticle which covers a group of tall, slender and columnar receptor cells. These cells bear small hairlike processes at their outer ends and their inner ends are connected with nerve fibres. The epidermal receptors are tactile in function. They are also concerned with changes in temperature and respond to chemical stimuli. Earthworms are extremely sensitive to touch and mechanical vibration.

Buccal receptor (Sense organ)

These receptors are located only in the epithelium of the buccal chamber. These receptors are gustatory and olfactory (related to taste and smell). They also respond to chemical stimuli. (Chemoreceptor)

Digestive system

The gut of the earthworm is a straight tube that extends from the worm's mouth to its anus. It is differentiated into an alimentary canal and associated glands which are embedded in the wall of the alimentary canal itself. The alimentary canal consists of a mouth, buccal cavity (generally running through the first one or two segments of the earthworm), pharynx (running generally about four segments in length), esophagus, crop, gizzard (usually), and intestine.

Food enters at the mouth. The pharynx acts as a suction pump; its muscular walls draw in food. In the pharynx, the pharyngeal glands secrete mucus. Food moves into the esophagus, where calcium (from the blood and ingested from previous meals) is pumped in to maintain proper blood calcium levels in the blood and food pH. From there the food passes into the crop and gizzard. In the gizzard, strong muscular contractions grind the food with the help of mineral particles ingested along with the food. Once through the gizzard, food continues through the intestine for digestion. The intestine secretes pepsin to digest proteins, amylase to digest polysaccharides, cellulase to digest cellulose, and lipase to digest fats. Earthworms use, in addition to the digestive proteins, a class of surface active compounds called drilodefensins, which help digest plant material. Instead of being coiled like a mammalian intestine, in the earthworm's intestine a large mid-dorsal, tongue-like fold is present, called a typhlosole, with many folds running along its length, increasing its surface area to increase nutrient absorption. The intestine has its own pair of muscle layers like the body, but in reverse order—an inner circular layer within an outer longitudinal layer.

Circulatory system

Earthworms have a dual circulatory system in which both the coelomic fluid and a closed circulatory system carry the food, waste, and respiratory gases. The closed circulatory system has five main blood vessels: the dorsal (top) vessel, which runs above the digestive tract; the ventral (bottom) vessel, which runs below the digestive tract; the subneural vessel, which runs below the ventral nerve cord; and two lateroneural vessels on either side of the nerve cord.

The dorsal vessel is mainly a collecting structure in the intestinal region. It receives a pair commissural and dorsal intestines in each segment. The ventral vessel branches off to a pair of ventro-tegumentaries and ventro-intestinals in each segment. The subneural vessel also gives out a pair of commissurals running along the posterior surface of the septum.

The pumping action on the dorsal vessel moves the blood forward, while the other four longitudinal vessels carry the blood rearward. In segments seven through eleven, a pair of aortic arches ring the coelom and acts as hearts, pumping the blood to the ventral vessel that acts as the aorta. The blood consists of ameboid cells and haemoglobin dissolved in the plasma. The second circulatory system derives from the cells of the digestive system that line the coelom. As the digestive cells become full, they release non-living cells of fat into the fluid-filled coelom, where they float freely but can pass through the walls separating each segment, moving food to other parts and assist in wound healing.

Excretory system

The excretory system contains a pair of nephridia in every segment, except for the first three and the last ones. The three types of nephridia are: integumentary, septal, and pharyngeal. The integumentary nephridia lie attached to the inner side of the body wall in all segments except the first two. The septal nephridia are attached to both sides of the septa behind the 15th segment. The pharyngeal nephridia are attached to the fourth, fifth and sixth segments. The waste in the coelom fluid from a forward segment is drawn in by the beating of cilia of the nephrostome. From there it is carried through the septum (wall) via a tube which forms a series of loops entwined by blood capillaries that also transfer waste into the tubule of the nephrostome. The excretory wastes are then finally discharged through a pore on the worm's side.

Respiration

Earthworms have no special respiratory organs. Gases are exchanged through the moist skin and capillaries, where the oxygen is picked up by the haemoglobin dissolved in the blood plasma and carbon dioxide is released. Water, as well as salts, can also be moved through the skin by active transport.

Life and physiology

At birth, earthworms emerge small but fully formed, lacking only their sex structures which develop in about 60 to 90 days. They attain full size in about one year. Scientists predict that the average lifespan under field conditions is four to eight years, while most garden varieties live only one to two years.

Reproduction

Earthworm copulation
Earthworm cocoons from L. terrestris
An earthworm cocoon from L. rubellus

Several common earthworm species are mostly parthenogenetic, meaning that growth and development of embryos happens without fertilization. Among lumbricid earthworms, parthenogenesis arose from sexual relatives many times. Parthenogenesis in some Aporrectodea trapezoides lineages arose 6.4 to 1.1 million years ago from sexual ancestors. A few species exhibit pseudogamous parthogenesis, meaning that mating is necessary to stimulate reproduction, even though no male genetic material passes to the offspring.

Earthworm mating occurs on the surface, most often at night. Earthworms are hermaphrodites; that is, they have both male and female sexual organs. The sexual organs are located in segments 9 to 15. Earthworms have one or two pairs of testes contained within sacs. The two or four pairs of seminal vesicles produce, store and release the sperm via the male pores. Ovaries and oviducts in segment 13 release eggs via female pores on segment 14, while sperm is expelled from segment 15. One or more pairs of spermathecae are present in segments 9 and 10 (depending on the species) which are internal sacs that receive and store sperm from the other worm during copulation. As a result, segment 15 of one worm exudes sperm into segments 9 and 10 with its storage vesicles of its mate. Some species use external spermatophores for sperm transfer.

In Hormogaster samnitica and Hormogaster elisae transcriptome DNA libraries were sequenced and two sex pheromones, Attractin and Temptin, were detected in all tissue samples of both species. Sex pheromones are probably important in earthworms because they live in an environment where chemical signaling may play a crucial role in attracting a partner and in facilitating outcrossing. Outcrossing would provide the benefit of masking the expression of deleterious recessive mutations in progeny (see Complementation).

Copulation and reproduction are separate processes in earthworms. The mating pair overlap front ends ventrally and each exchanges sperm with the other. The clitellum becomes very reddish to pinkish in colour. Sometime after copulation, long after the worms have separated, the clitellum (behind the spermathecae) secretes material which forms a ring around the worm. The worm then backs out of the ring, and as it does so, it injects its own eggs and the other worm's sperm into it. Thus each worm becomes the genetic father of some of their offspring (due to its own sperm transferred to other earthworm) and the genetic mother (offsprings from its own egg cells) of the rest. As the worm slips out of the ring, the ends of the cocoon seal to form a vaguely onion-shaped incubator (cocoon) in which the embryonic worms develop. Hence fertilization is external. The cocoon is then deposited in the soil. After three weeks, 2 to 20 offspring hatch with an average of four. Development is direct i.e. without formation of any larva.

DNA repair

Exposure of the earthworm Eisenia fetida to ionizing radiation induced DNA strand breaks and oxidized DNA bases. These DNA damages could then be repaired in somatic and spermatogenic cells. Earthworms testis cells are also capable of repairing hydrogen peroxide induced oxidative DNA adducts.

Locomotion

Close up of an earthworm in garden soil

Earthworms travel underground by means of waves of muscular contractions which alternately shorten and lengthen the body (peristalsis). The shortened part is anchored to the surrounding soil by tiny clawlike bristles (setae) set along its segmented length. In all the body segments except the first, last and clitellum, there is a ring of S-shaped setae embedded in the epidermal pit of each segment (perichaetine). The whole burrowing process is aided by the secretion of lubricating mucus. As a result of their movement through their lubricated tunnels, worms can make gurgling noises underground when disturbed. Earthworms move through soil by expanding crevices with force; when forces are measured according to body weight, hatchlings can push 500 times their own body weight whereas large adults can push only 10 times their own body weight.

Regeneration

Earthworms have the ability to regenerate lost segments, but this ability varies between species and depends on the extent of the damage. Stephenson (1930) devoted a chapter of his monograph to this topic, while G. E. Gates spent 20 years studying regeneration in a variety of species. But "because little interest was shown", Gates (1972) published only a few of his findings. These nevertheless show it is theoretically possible to grow two whole worms from a bisected specimen in certain species.

Gates's reports included:

  • Eisenia fetida (Savigny, 1826) with head regeneration, in an anterior direction, possible at each intersegmental level back to and including 23/24, while tails were regenerated at any levels behind 20/21; thus two worms may grow from one.
  • Lumbricus terrestris (Linnaeus, 1758) replacing anterior segments from as far back as 13/14 and 16/17 but tail regeneration was never found.
  • Perionyx excavatus (Perrier, 1872) readily regenerated lost parts of the body, in an anterior direction from as far back as 17/18, and in a posterior direction as far forward as 20/21.
  • Lampito mauritii (Kinberg, 1867) with regeneration in anterior direction at all levels back to 25/26 and tail regeneration from 30/31; head regeneration was sometimes believed to be caused by internal amputation resulting from Sarcophaga sp. larval infestation.
  • Criodrilus lacuum (Hoffmeister, 1845) also has prodigious regenerative capacity with 'head' regeneration from as far back as 40/41.

An unidentified Tasmanian earthworm shown growing a replacement head has been reported.

Taxonomy and distribution

Within the world of taxonomy, the stable 'Classical System' of Michaelsen (1900) and Stephenson (1930) was gradually eroded by the controversy over how to classify earthworms, such that Fender and McKey-Fender (1990) went so far as to say, "The family-level classification of the megascolecid earthworms is in chaos." Over the years, many scientists have developed their own classification systems for earthworms, which led to confusion, and these systems have been and still continue to be revised and updated. The classification system used here which was developed by Blakemore (2000), is a modern reversion to the Classical System that is historically proven and widely accepted.

Categorization of a megadrile earthworm into one of its taxonomic families under suborders Lumbricina and Moniligastrida is based on such features as the makeup of the clitellum, the location and disposition of the sex features (pores, prostatic glands, etc.), number of gizzards, and body shape. Currently, over 6,000 species of terrestrial earthworms are named, as provided in a species name database, but the number of synonyms is unknown.

The families, with their known distributions or origins:

  • Acanthodrilidae
  • Ailoscolecidae – the Pyrenees and the southeast USA
  • Almidae – tropical equatorial (South America, Africa, Indo-Asia)
  • Benhamiinae – Ethiopian, Neotropical (a possible subfamily of Octochaetidae)
  • Criodrilidae – southwestern Palaearctic: Europe, Middle East, Russia and Siberia to Pacific coast; Japan (Biwadrilus); mainly aquatic
  • Diplocardiinae/-idae – Gondwanan or Laurasian? (a subfamily of Acanthodrilidae)
  • Enchytraeidae – cosmopolitan but uncommon in tropics (usually classed with Microdriles)
  • Eudrilidae – Tropical Africa south of the Sahara
  • Exxidae – Neotropical: Central America and the Caribbean
  • Glossoscolecidae – Neotropical: Central and South America, Caribbean
  • Haplotaxidae – cosmopolitan distribution (usually classed with Microdriles)
  • Hormogastridae – Mediterranean
  • Kynotidae – Malagasian: Madagascar
  • Lumbricidae – Holarctic: North America, Europe, Middle East, Central Asia to Japan
  • Lutodrilidae – Louisiana the southeast USA
  • Megascolecidae
  • Microchaetidae – Terrestrial in Africa especially South African grasslands
  • Moniligastridae – Oriental and Indian subregion
  • Ocnerodrilidae – Neotropics, Africa; India
  • Octochaetidae – Australasian, Indian, Oriental, Ethiopian, Neotropical
  • Octochaetinae – Australasian, Indian, Oriental (subfamily if Benhamiinae is accepted)
  • Sparganophilidae – Nearctic, Neotropical: North and Central America
  • Tumakidae – Colombia, South America

As an invasive species

Main articles: Earthworms as invasive species and Invasive earthworms of North America

From a total of around 7,000 species, only about 150 species are widely distributed around the world. These are the peregrine or cosmopolitan earthworms. Of the 182 taxa of earthworms found in the United States and Canada, 60 (33%) are introduced species.

Ecology

Permanent vertical burrow

Earthworms are classified into three main ecophysiological categories: (1) leaf litter- or compost-dwelling worms that are nonburrowing, live at the soil-litter interface and eat decomposing organic matter (epigeic) e.g. Eisenia fetida; (2) topsoil- or subsoil-dwelling worms that feed (on soil), burrow and cast within the soil, creating horizontal burrows in upper 10–30  cm of soil (endogeic); and (3) worms that construct permanent deep vertical burrows which they use to visit the surface to obtain plant material for food, such as leaves (anecic, meaning "reaching up"), e.g. Lumbricus terrestris.

Earthworm populations depend on both physical and chemical properties of the soil, such as temperature, moisture, pH, salts, aeration, and texture, as well as available food, and the ability of the species to reproduce and disperse. One of the most important environmental factors is pH, but earthworms vary in their preferences. Most favour neutral to slightly acidic soils. Lumbricus terrestris is still present in a pH of 5.4, Dendrobaena octaedra at a pH of 4.3 and some Megascolecidae are present in extremely acidic humic soils. Soil pH may also influence the numbers of worms that go into diapause. The more acidic the soil, the sooner worms go into diapause, and remain in diapause the longest time at a pH of 6.4.

Earthworms are preyed upon by many species of birds (e.g. robins, starlings, thrushes, gulls, crows), snakes, wood turtles, mammals (e.g. bears, boars, foxes, hedgehogs, pigs, moles) and invertebrates (e.g. ants, flatworms, ground beetles and other beetles, snails, spiders, and slugs). Earthworms have many internal parasites, including protozoa, platyhelminthes, mites, and nematodes; they can be found in the worms' blood, seminal vesicles, coelom, or intestine, or in their cocoons (e.g. the mite Histiostoma murchiei is a parasite of earthworm cocoons).

The earthworm activity aerates and mixes the soil, and is conducive to mineralization of nutrients and their uptake by vegetation. Certain species of earthworm come to the surface and graze on the higher concentrations of organic matter present there, mixing it with the mineral soil. Because a high level of organic matter mixing is associated with soil fertility, an abundance of earthworms is generally considered beneficial by farmers and gardeners. As long ago as 1881 Charles Darwin wrote: "It may be doubted whether there are many other animals which have played so important a part in the history of the world, as have these lowly organized creatures."

Devil's coach horse beetle preying on Lumbricus sp.

Also, while, as the name suggests, the main habitat of earthworms is in soil, they are not restricted to this habitat. The brandling worm Eisenia fetida lives in decaying plant matter and manure. Arctiostrotus vancouverensis from Vancouver Island and the Olympic Peninsula is generally found in decaying conifer logs. Aporrectodea limicola, Sparganophilus spp., and several others are found in mud in streams. Some species are arboreal, some aquatic and some euryhaline (salt-water tolerant) and littoral (living on the sea-shore, e.g. Pontodrilus litoralis). Even in the soil species, special habitats, such as soils derived from serpentine, have an earthworm fauna of their own.

Vermicomposting of organic "wastes" and addition of this organic matter to the soil, preferably as a surface mulch, will provide several species of earthworms with their food and nutrient requirements, and will create the optimum conditions of temperature and moisture that will stimulate their activity.

Earthworms are environmental indicators of soil health. Earthworms feed on the decaying matter in the soil and analyzing the contents of their digestive tracts gives insight into the overall condition of the soil. The earthworm gut accumulates chemicals, including heavy metals such as cadmium, mercury, zinc, and copper. The population size of the earthworm indicates the quality of the soil, as healthy soil would contain a larger number of earthworms.

Environmental impacts

The major benefits of earthworm activities to soil fertility for agriculture can be summarized as:

  • Biological: In many soils, earthworms play a major role in the conversion of large pieces of organic matter into rich humus, thus improving soil fertility. This is achieved by the worm's actions of pulling below the surface deposited organic matter such as leaf fall or manure, either for food or to plug its burrow. Once in the burrow, the worm will shred the leaf, partially digest it and mingle it with the earth. Worm casts (see bottom right) can contain 40 percent more humus than the top 9 inches (230 mm) of soil in which the worm is living.
Faeces in the form of casts
  • Chemical: In addition to dead organic matter, the earthworm also ingests any other soil particles that are small enough—including sand grains up to 1⁄20 inch (1.3 mm)—into its gizzard, wherein those minute fragments of grit grind everything into a fine paste which is then digested in the intestine. When the worm excretes this in the form of casts, deposited on the surface or deeper in the soil, minerals and plant nutrients are changed to an accessible form for plants to use. Investigations in the United States show that fresh earthworm casts are five times richer in available nitrogen, seven times richer in available phosphates, and 11 times richer in available potassium than the surrounding upper 6 inches (150 mm) of soil. In conditions where humus is plentiful, the weight of casts produced may be greater than 4.5 kilograms (9.9 lb) per worm per year.
  • Physical: The earthworm's burrowing creates a multitude of channels through the soil and is of great value in maintaining the soil structure, enabling processes of aeration and drainage. Permaculture co-founder Bill Mollison points out that by sliding in their tunnels, earthworms "act as an innumerable army of pistons pumping air in and out of the soils on a 24-hour cycle (more rapidly at night)". Thus, the earthworm not only creates passages for air and water to traverse the soil, but also modifies the vital organic component that makes a soil healthy (see Bioturbation). Earthworms promote the formation of nutrient-rich casts (globules of soil, stable in soil mucus) that have high soil aggregation and soil fertility and quality. In podzol soils, earthworms can obliterate the characteristic banded appearance of the soil profile by mixing the organic (LFH), eluvial (E) and upper illuvial (B) horizons to create a single dark Ap horizon.

Earthworms accelerate nutrient cycling in the soil-plant system through fragmentation & mixing of plant debris – physical grinding & chemical digestion. The earthworm's existence cannot be taken for granted. Dr. W. E. Shewell-Cooper observed "tremendous numerical differences between adjacent gardens", and worm populations are affected by a host of environmental factors, many of which can be influenced by good management practices on the part of the gardener or farmer.

Darwin estimated that arable land contains up to 53,000 per acre (130,000/ha) of worms, but more recent research has produced figures suggesting that even poor soil may support 250,000 per acre (620,000/ha), whilst rich fertile farmland may have up to 1,750,000 per acre (4,300,000/ha), meaning that the weight of earthworms beneath a farmer's soil could be greater than that of the livestock upon its surface. Richly organic topsoil populations of earthworms are much higher – averaging 500 per square metre (46/sq ft) and up to 400 g2 – such that, for the 7 billion of us, each person alive today has support of 7 million earthworms.

The ability to break down organic materials and excrete concentrated nutrients makes the earthworm a functional contributor in restoration projects. In response to ecosystem disturbances, some sites have utilized earthworms to prepare soil for the return of native flora. Research from the Station d'écologie Tropicale de Lamto asserts that the earthworms positively influence the rate of macroaggregate formation, an important feature for soil structure. The stability of aggregates in response to water was also found to be improved when constructed by earthworms.

Though not fully quantified yet, greenhouse gas emissions of earthworms likely contribute to global warming, especially since top-dwelling earthworms increase the speed of carbon cycles and have been spread by humans into many new geographies.

Threats

See also: Biodiversity loss § Earthworms

Nitrogenous fertilizers tend to create acidic conditions, which are fatal to the worms, and dead specimens are often found on the surface following the application of substances such as DDT, lime sulphur, and lead arsenate. In Australia, changes in farming practices such as the application of superphosphates on pastures and a switch from pastoral farming to arable farming had a devastating effect on populations of the giant Gippsland earthworm, leading to their classification as a protected species. Globally, certain earthworms populations have been devastated by deviation from organic production and the spraying of synthetic fertilizers and biocides, with at least three species now listed as extinct, but many more endangered.

Economic impact

Earthworms being raised at La Chonita Hacienda in Mexico

Various species of worms are used in vermiculture, the practice of feeding organic waste to earthworms to decompose food waste. These are usually Eisenia fetida (or its close relative Eisenia andrei) or the brandling worm, commonly known as the tiger worm or red wiggler. They are distinct from soil-dwelling earthworms. In the tropics, the African nightcrawler Eudrilus eugeniae and the Indian blue Perionyx excavatus are used.

Earthworms are sold all over the world; the market is sizable. According to Doug Collicutt, "In 1980, 370 million worms were exported from Canada, with a Canadian export value of $13 million and an American retail value of $54 million."

Earthworms provide an excellent source of protein for fish, fowl, and pigs, but have also been used traditionally for human consumption. Noke is a culinary term used by the Māori of New Zealand to refer to earthworms, which they consider delicacies for their chiefs.

See also

References

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Works cited

  • Blakemore, Robert J. (2012). Cosmopolitan Earthworms – an Eco-Taxonomic Guide to the Peregrine Species of the World. (5th Ed). Yokohama, Japan: VermEcology.
  • Edwards, Clive A.; Bohlen, P. J. (1996). Biology and Ecology of Earthworms. Springer Science & Business Media. ISBN 978-0-412-56160-3.
  • Sims, Reginald William; Gerard, B (1985). Earthworms: Keys and Notes for the Identification and Study of the Species. London: Published for The Linnean Society of London and the Estuarine and Brackish-Water Sciences Association by E. J. Brill/Dr. W. Backhuys.

Further reading

  • Edwards, Clive A. (ed.) Earthworm Ecology. Boca Raton: CRC Press, 2004. Second revised edition. ISBN 0-8493-1819-X
  • Lee, Keneth E. Earthworms: Their Ecology and Relationships with Soils and Land Use. Academic Press. Sydney, 1985. ISBN 0-12-440860-5
  • Stewart, Amy. The Earth Moved: On the Remarkable Achievements of Earthworms. Chapel Hill, N.C.: Algonquin Books, 2004. ISBN 1-56512-337-9

External links

Taxon identifiers
Lumbricina
Categories: