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The Rural Voice, 2002-04, Page 19Je. Pc These Night Crawlers meet up to mate without leaving their respective burrows. Worms are most active in spring and fall when food and protection is more readily available. Summer months are hotter and dryer, placing the worms at risk of dehydration. s leaves of apple trees and suyabeans. So voracious are their appetites, that these earthworms can completely sweep clear the surface of a soyabean field of its fallen leaves in just a few short weeks. In fall, the entrances to the Night Crawlers' burrows can easily be recognized by the mounds of leaves and plant material that form as they drag any decaying litter, within reach to their burrows (photo on page 14). Removing leaf litter from the soil not only increases the organic matter in the soil, but can also reduce the spread of fungal diseases in crops, vineyards and orchards by removing infected leaves from the surface. n exchange,,the earthworms deposit fertilized soil at the surface — casts, or pellets composed of particles of soil and undigested waste left at the openings of their burrows. Earthworms feed on bacteria, fungi, nematodes, and decaying matter from both plant and animal life. Earthworms will also ingest soil while burrowing, mixing the soil while gaining additional nutrients. Remarkably, Earthworms can consume up to one-third of their own body weight in a day. In a single acre of land, earthworms can recycle 10 tons of decaying material into nutrient rich soil, thereby increasing the availability of nitrogen, phosphorous and other nutrients. Deep borrowing worms like the Night Crawler also bring valuable minerals to the surface from great depths that may otherwise never be available to plant life. Meanwhile, other species of earthworms spread out and attack the soil at different levels, each filling its own niche with yarying tunneling and eating habits. Garden Worms, or Dug Worms (Aporrectodea trapezoids, A. turberculata, A. turgida) burrow continuously and 114 r�r .fa 1.4 randomly as they search for food in the top 10 centimetres of soil. This tunneling activity creates a large network of horizontal and vertical tunnels. These provide increased aeration and water infiltration that increases the availability of water and oxygen to plant roots. In addition, these networks of tunnels provide channels for developing root systems to follow and result in larger, deeper and denser root systems. Burrows and soil aggregates improve soil structure, add soil stability and limit erosion. Earthworms can be considered an important indicator of healthy soils. If conditions are not to their liking. earthworms will not be present in large numbers — if at all. But where there are earthworms, the soil is likely more biologically diverse and active. It is the Earthworms, together with a host of other soil organisms, which are responsible for the vast majority of cycling of nutrients in our soils, Earthworms can be appropriately called ecosystem engineers, building the soil and impacting every living thing, from other organisms in the soil to the plant and animal life above. Despite all that earthworms I v. contribute to our soils and crops. It is the plow that is one of the worms' worst worries. By destroying earthworms and their burrows. tilling markedly reduces earthworm numbers — from potentially hundreds of worms per square meter in some no -till soils. to perhaps only a few in conventionally -tilled soils. Tilling also disturbs the surface litter that feeds, as well as protects the earthworms from heat and dehydration. A study conducted by Agriculture Canada at the Woodslee Research Station in southwestern Ontario. found that soils existing under a no -till system for years had an earthworm population of 170 individuals per square metre. However. after only a single season of conventional tillage. the population in this same soil plummeted to only 20 earthworms per square metre. And perhaps more surprisingly. when left unplowed the earthworm population in this soil required two or more seasons to rebound back to their former numbers. While various tillage systems are used or supported for various reasons, it is important to recognize how these alter, or create new soil The wonder of worms The Night Crawler, or Dew Worm (Lumbricus terrestris) is Canada's largest earthworm species; the largest specimen recorded was nearly 30 centimetres long and weighed 11.2 grams. Earthworms usually burrow deeply to avoid freezing in the winter. The deep vertical burrows of the Night Crawler can extend to a whopping 3 metres in depth. Earthworm casts, or "droppings", may contain up to five times the nitrate. seven times the available phosphorous, and 11 times the potash that occurs in the surrounding, uneaten soils. Large parts of Saskatchewan appear to be void of earthworms. Although some farmers have reported finding worms in their wells. scientists still haven't identified any earthworm species from the immediately surrounding grasslands.° APRIL 2002 15