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Watch Where You Step: Earthworms Beneath Your Feet

Published by thestickman in Offbeat
November 20, 2008

Earthworms are everywhere, and go mostly unnoticed. Beneath your feet dwell hundreds possibly thousands of these creatures that you almost never see… unless you go looking for them!

Fishermen Love ‘Em!

The earthworm is a common creature that lives under the soil. Their oft-common names include ”rain worm”, “night crawler”, dew-worm” and “angleworm,” the latter owing to its common use as fishing (angling) bait.

The body of the earthworm is basically a muscular system in the form of a tube, which houses the digestive system on the inside as another tube running the entire length. Earthworms have two main blood vessels that extend the length of the creature, with several aortic arches, -‘hearts’ basically. The number of aortic arches varies in different species of earthworms, but a common earthworm typically has five hearts.

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All earthworms take food in a unique manner; their mouths are directly connected to their digestive tract with just a small crop (storage chamber) to help grind the consumed food to a more digestible slurry. They merely swallow their food and it passes directly into the digestive system. Earthworms mostly eat decomposing matter such as leaves, plant clipping and other plant material. Other varieties of worms are more ‘geophagous.’ That is, they eat soil or earthy loam-like dirt in a manner similar to “pica” in order to obtain nutrients. “Pica” is generally classified as an eating disorder in advanced animals, defined as a craving for and ingestion of non-food items.

What Do Earthworms Do?

Earthworms improve soil quality by their tunneling and removal of decaying matter from the surface. Aeration of the soil and their tunneling improve soil quality and rain penetration. This tunneling reduces erosion as the rainwater can soak into the rooting levels of plants instead of merely running-off, carrying topsoil away with it. Plant roots can more easily propagate through soils previous burrowed by worms, thus allowing plants to infiltrate new territory quicker than surface-level propagation. Soil that has been worked by earthworms has a more stable ‘crumb-like’ quality, also making it less likely to just blow away in wind erosion as well.

Material cycling is an important function of earthworms; for instance, they remove waste that is spread upon the surface of fields. As a normal process of waste removal in some municipalities, earthworms move this product that is spread upon fields to deep underground to be used by trees and plants.. –Liquefied sludge slurry from Waste Treatment Facilities in some municipalities is sprayed upon farmer’s fields and earthworms do the chore of getting it buried. Days or weeks later, this process can be repeated. The Waste Treatment Facility benefits are it removes heavy bottom-sludge from their collecting ponds, and the farmer benefits as this is good fertilizer for their fields.

Life would be radically different here on the planet if it weren’t for these very useful and mostly unseen creatures!

Are Earthworms All Good and Beneficial?

For the most part, yes. Earthworms are a sign of healthy soil. A soil devoid of earthworms tends to mean that the soil is bad, overly acidic or heavily polluted.

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The Good, The Bad and The So-So

Some earthworms have a few bad qualities. Introduced species of earthworms can compete with local indigenous species. Most introduced species here came from Europe for whatever reasons, probably foreigners wishing for familiar creatures in their new chosen land. In western Canada for instance, a type of introduced earthworm deposits hardpan clay-rich soils from deep underground to the surface, which makes managing gardens, golf courses and personal lawns troublesome. The indigenous specie of worms do not do this, as they don’t tunnel as deep. The local worms are more beneficial for that region than the invasive newcomers.

Other earthworms, like the Red Worm (Eisenia fetida), coexist with indigenous worms and even thrive in soils that are too acidic for other native species of earthworms, like decomposing manure piles. Red Worms are not as long as the common earthworm, and they can withstand a greater range of temperatures along with short-term drier conditions. They can be kept alive for quite some time in smaller ‘bait boxes’ while using them as bait for fishing. They are more ‘energetic‘ on the fisherman’s fishhook. They continue to wiggle for a longer period of time than do normal worms, making them a favorite with fishermen. Fish seem to strike faster and harder on an ‘active wiggler.’ Able to withstand a greater range of temperature favors Red Worms for raising then in breeder boxes both indoors as well as outdoors. Avid fishermen, reptile and amphibian hobbyists often raise their own Red Worms to supplement their sport, avocation or their pet’s diet.

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Worldwide, there are over three thousand species of earthworms, but only a small number of species are indigenous to Ontario, CANADA where yours truly currently lives. Hermaphrodites, -it can be said that earthworms really only have one gender. But it still requires two worms to mate as there is an exchange of gametes. They are egg layers, which are cast-off in cocoons that form in a skin sac that forms around their bodies. When it is ready to be shed, they ‘back out of’ the subsequent ring cocoon, which is shaped a little bit like a lemon. The baby worms are born fully developed and ready to begin their life.

Adult worms lay between twenty to forty cocoon sacs per year and while it takes less than one year to reach maturity, some earthworms can live for up to an incredible nine years!

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Back in New York when I was a teenager, we kids in town used to collect earthworms at night to sell to a local bait shop for 30-cents per dozen. He would take all we could bring in, anytime, all the time. It was good, easy money for us kids. An hour or two of working on a good evening could earn a ten or fifteen dollar reward. The most I ever picked up in one night, -and it was a perfect night for it, -moonless, windless, humid and slightly foggy, was 117-dozen earthworms! I filled a 3-gallon mop pail level full, all earthworms! It took me several hours that perfect night, -four or five hours with frequent breaks as I recall, but it was an easy $35.00 which was ‘big money’ to a teenage still in high school.

A Cash Crop of Earthworms?

A few years ago here in the west end of Toronto, a local Polish newspaper advertised for ‘laborers’ to convene for mass worm hunts. A group affair, you go with this group to golf courses or wherever to pick up nightcrawlers, work for as long as you want, and they bought the worms you gathered for ten cents apiece! Okay, wow…I would go do that! To put that into perspective, that 117 dozen worms I gathered that one night would be worth $140.40! But you might wonder, -is an earthworm worm worth 10-cents apiece? And to whom would this be worth? Well, in the summertime fishermen along Lake Ontario here in Toronto will buy little bait boxes of worms for 25-cents per worm! I must assume that some enterprising soul was re-selling this en-masse to Fishing Clubs, Yachtsmen/Boating Clubs and possibly even directly to fishermen along the shoreline at fishing time. Somebody was making a profit.

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Earthworms have been one essential ingredient in Chinese, Korean and Vietnamese medicines for thousands of years, used along with various herbal remedies specifically, one called “Lumbricus Tonic”

Some of the purported usages of this remedy were to;

‘…improve the tone of the sympathetic and the parasympathetic functions of the central nervous system’ and also to ‘…support the digestive function of the stomach and gastrointestinal tract.’

“Lumbricus tonic” is said to have no known toxic effects, no contraindications nor any adverse interactions. -It is safe to consume.

A traditional medicine in Vietnamese culture made from so-called “Earth Dragons” (“Earthworms”) has the grandiose title of “Miracle Medicine that can save lives in 60 minutes” make similar claims. That it comes from the soil holds some special meaning as to having natural concentrated nutritional content. At any rate, this toad (above) seems to be enjoying it…

And Let’s Not Forget…

Hey, -it’s mostly protein! But don’t even get me started on that old “sodium erythorbate” in hot dog wieners/frankfurters is really “salted earth-worms” urban legend. That is patently untrue. “Sodium erythorbate” is really an anti-oxidant similar to Vitamin-C, and it is made from SUGAR, not worms.

However…

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Chow down, boys! That’s just yucky right there!

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25 Comments

  1. Posted November 20, 2008 at 5:43 am

    Nice article, I didnt like the pictures though as I was having some food while I was on this article :)

  2. Posted November 20, 2008 at 6:30 am

    Great article about a humble creature. They are truly delicious on toast with a little cheese sprinkled on the top, incidentally!

  3. Posted November 20, 2008 at 6:41 am

    Fark, man your Earhworms are massive! I need some to banish venom snakes man!

    Great stuff. j

  4. Posted November 20, 2008 at 7:51 am

    Nice write, but not what I really wanted to be looking at at 9 in the morning…lol!

  5. Anna Ski
    Posted November 20, 2008 at 8:10 am

    Gosh, this reminds me when I was young. My brother used to sit in the garden playing with them and I used to run to mummy and tell on him. Then he would get the worms and come up behind me unknowingly and put them in my hair!!! LOL

  6. Posted November 20, 2008 at 8:45 am

    As a gardener,all hail to the worm. Didn’t know they had such a long lifespan.

  7. Posted November 20, 2008 at 9:14 am

    Worms, the perfect way to spice up any social gathering :)

    Awesome article stickman!

  8. Posted November 20, 2008 at 9:29 am

    Small creatures have their duties on Earth

  9. Posted November 20, 2008 at 11:54 am

    Great article and great info and photos!

  10. Posted November 20, 2008 at 7:10 pm

    Nice article, but my God, what a ghastly sight.
    God bless.

  11. Posted November 20, 2008 at 7:46 pm

    Very informative. Am wondering whether is it true that one worm would grow into two if you cut it in half?

  12. Posted November 20, 2008 at 7:51 pm

    “Am wondering whether is it true that one worm would grow into two if you cut it in half?”

    In Earthworms, no. If they survive, they merely heal. They can lose about 1/3 to one-half their length, but require the head/aortic arche end to survive.

    You are thinking of tapeworms. They can withstand being snipped several times, each piece will sprout another head and posterior… I hate tapeworms. Yech!!

  13. Posted November 21, 2008 at 3:34 am

    Even thought they seem big and disgusting, earthworms are vital to our enviroment. If it wasn’t for earthworms, many things that we eat now, wouldn’t exist, like vegetables and fruits!

  14. Posted November 21, 2008 at 4:41 am

    Informative piece stickman. Well done.

  15. Posted November 21, 2008 at 9:58 am

    Nice article:)

  16. Posted November 21, 2008 at 12:30 pm

    Good informative article, great job.

  17. Posted November 21, 2008 at 6:37 pm

    I think this is a wonderful article! The earthworm is an important animal that shares our earth, but hardly ever receives accolades for what it does for us. This would make a great children’s information book. Fantastic!

  18. Posted November 21, 2008 at 10:08 pm

    Great article! Very informative!

  19. weegysgram
    Posted November 22, 2008 at 7:08 am

    though I don’t care for worms (smile) I really enjoyed the article. Great writing, good information.

  20. Posted November 22, 2008 at 7:49 am

    great article but gross images. ;)

  21. Posted November 22, 2008 at 7:43 pm

    Remarkable creatures. Excellent article.

  22. Posted February 11, 2009 at 12:38 pm

    Great article.

    On a side note, remember how I posted on the forum about a site stealing Purple Slinky articles? While looking into it, I found that this article has been reposted at a site that republishes articles at http://tinyurl.com/anhd6f. When I sent them a complaint to the email addresses that I found associated with the site (“gatekeeper@eastgate.net.my; dentkt@yahoo.com; resellagent@yahoo.com”), they did take my stuff down, but only the specific articles that I requested. I would suggest looking around their site before sending any requests as they have this bad habit of posting the same article over and over. One of my articles was posted 9 times.

    In related news, it seems that Google AdSense has stopped posting ads on the site.

    Thanks again to Maria Blazz for finding this site!

  23. David J Lavoie
    Posted May 14, 2009 at 1:15 am

    The article was really great but the photographs were yuck! I mean that poor toad was a gonner. Give im 15 minutes and that poor boy was sure to explode! ANy way I thought the articles were great,- you just freaked me out a little thats all. God bless Washington state.

  24. Alyssa Perkins
    Posted May 29, 2009 at 3:12 pm

    this website is very interesting peeps ok i just dont like every thing its a little yuckky

  25. Jennifer Malina
    Posted May 29, 2009 at 3:15 pm

    this was ok and neat but at the same time it scared me a little with the reproduction and how big it is but it has very good info and yuckky pictures but i liked it

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