"Lowly" Earthworms
Every time I wonder what I'm going to write about, someone either emails me or calls about something that gives me inspiration. This time it was the woman who emailed me about my fruit fly blog and mentioned that she raises earthworms and wondered if we needed any. Not many people can say they need earthworms, but we actually do! We use them to feed some of our animals, we use them for our fishing camps and our educator has a worm farm at one of the local Community Centers. What is a worm farm for, you might ask? Not to make worms for other animals to eat usually, although that can be a reason to have a worm farm. But many people do it to get compost. If you add bedding, worms, and food scraps to a container the worms will eat the food scraps and turn them into compost. Compost makes a great, nutrient-rich soil that is perfect for growing plants. They are critical recyclers in nature too by breaking down organic material like like dead plants, poo, and dead animals. In doing this they make valuable nutrients that are essential for soil to be fertile.
There are several types of Earthworms (not all of them are good candidates to live and grow in worm farms):
Nightcrawlers-Are a common earthworm in the North and are the ones seen in fields and lawns at night. They are often used as fishing bait, but they supposedly aren't that easy to raise since they reproduce slowly and require special conditions to breed.
Field Worms (aka Garden Worms)- Also make good fish bait and are smaller than nightcrawlers, but also not good to farm.
Manure Worms (also called Red Wigglers since they tend to squirm when handled)- Are easy to raise and so are one of the favorites of worm farmers.
Red worms (are another type of manure worm)- Are smaller and lighter than the manure worms and are the other type that people raise.
Raising Earthworms means you need to know a little bit about their reproduction. You might remember from your high school science class that they are kinda freaky because Earthworms are usually hermaphroditic (each individual has both male and female reproductive organs), although like some other hermaphrodites, they don't usually self-fertilize. A mutual exchange of sperm occurs between two worms during mating, then mature sperm and egg cells and nutritive fluid are put into cocoons. The eggs are fertilized by the sperm cells within the cocoon, which then slips off the worm and is put in (or on) the soil. The eggs hatch after about 3 weeks, each cocoon producing from two to twenty baby worms with an average of four.
I believe that Earthworms are underappreciated. They've been around for 120 million years. In the time of the Pharoahs the famous Cleopatra said they were sacred and Aristotle called them "the intestines" of the soil. Charles Darwin said of Earthworms "It may be doubted whether there are many other animals in the world which have played so important a part in the history of the world...." True, for without Earthworms and their chewing their way through the dead stuff on Earth (and then pooping out their nutrient-filled castings), and without them crawling through and aerating our soil, we would have virtually useless soil for crops. And we all depend on crops as the base of our food chain. So next time you see the "lowly" Earthworm, instead of saying "yuck", say "thanks."