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17294


Date: September 29, 2020 at 11:02:02
From: Alan, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Invasive Asian worms laying country bare

URL: https://www.sciencenews.org/article/invasive-jumping-worms-damage-soil-threaten-forests


What could be more 2020 than an ongoing invasion of jumping worms?

These earthworms are wriggling their way across the United States,
voraciously devouring protective forest leaf litter and leaving behind bare,
denuded soil. They displace other earthworms, centipedes, salamanders
and ground-nesting birds, and disrupt forest food chains. They can
invade more than five hectares in a single year, changing soil chemistry
and microbial communities as they go, new research shows. And they
don’t even need mates to reproduce.

Endemic to Japan and the Korean Peninsula, three invasive species of
these worms — Amynthas agrestis, A. tokioensis and Metaphire
hilgendorfi — have been in the United States for over a century. But just
in the past 15 years, they’ve begun to spread widely (SNS: 10/7/16).
Collectively known as Asian jumping worms, crazy worms, snake worms
or Alabama jumpers, they’ve become well established across the South
and Mid-Atlantic and have reached parts of the Northeast, Upper
Midwest and West.

Jumping worms are often sold as compost worms or fishing bait. And
that, says soil ecologist Nick Henshue of the University at Buffalo in New
York, is partially how they’re spreading (SN: 11/5/17). Fishers like them
because the worms wriggle and thrash like angry snakes, which lures
fish, says Henshue. They’re also marketed as compost worms because
they gobble up food scraps far faster than other earthworms, such as
nightcrawlers and other Lumbricus species.

To date, scientists have worried most about the worms’ effects on ground
cover. Prior to a jumping worm invasion, the soft layer of decomposing
leaves, bark and sticks covering the forest floor might be more than a
dozen centimeters thick. What’s left afterward is bare soil with a different
structure and mineral content, says Sam Chan, an invasive species
specialist with Oregon Sea Grant at Oregon State University in Corvallis.
Worms can reduce leaf litter by 95 percent in a single season, he says.

That in turn can reduce or remove the forest understory, providing less
nutrients or protection for the creatures that live there or for seedlings to
grow. Eventually, different plants come in, usually invasive, nonnative
species, says Bradley Herrick, an ecologist and research program
manager at the University of Wisconsin–Madison Arboretum. And now,
new research shows the worms are also changing the soil chemistry and
the fungi, bacteria and microbes that live in the soils.

In a study in the October Soil Biology and Biochemistry, Herrick, soil
scientist Gabriel Price-Christenson and colleagues tested samples from
soils impacted by jumping worms. They were looking for changes in
carbon and nitrogen levels and in soils’ release of carbon dioxide, which
is produced by the metabolism of microbes and animals living in the soil.
Results showed that the longer the worms had lived in the soils, the more
the soils’ basal metabolic rate increased — meaning soils invaded by
jumping worms could release more carbon dioxide into the atmosphere,
says Price-Christenson, who is at the University of Illinois at Urbana-
Champaign.

Relative amounts of carbon and nitrogen in soils with jumping worms also
shifted, the team found. That can affect plant communities, Herrick says.
For example, although nitrogen is a necessary nutrient, if there’s too
much, or it’s available at the wrong time of year, plants or other soil
organisms won’t be able to use it.

The team also extracted DNA from worm poop and guts to examine
differences in microbes among the jumping worm species, and tested the
soils for bacterial and fungal changes. Each jumping worm species
harbors a different collection of microbes in its gut, the results showed.
That’s “a really important find,” Herrick says, “because for a long time,
we were talking about jumping worms as a large group … but now we’re
learning that [these different species] have different impacts on the soil,
which will likely cascade down to having different effects on other worms,
soil biota, pH and chemistry.”

The finding suggests each species might have a unique niche in the
environment, with gut microbes breaking down particular food sources.
This allows multiple species to invade and thrive together, Herrick says.
This makes sense, given findings of multiple species together, but it’s still
a surprise that such similar worms would have different niches, he says.

Scientists have been working hard to get a good handle on the biology of
these worms, Henshue says. So the newly discovered soil chemistry and
microbiology changes are “thoughtful” and important lines of research.
But there’s still a lot that’s unknown, making it hard to predict how much
farther the worms might spread and into what kinds of environments.
One important question is how weather conditions affect the worms. For
example, a prolonged drought this year in Wisconsin seems to have killed
off many of the worms, Herrick says. Soils teeming with wriggling worms
just a few weeks ago now hold far fewer.

Perhaps that’s a hopeful sign that even these hardy worms have their
limits, but in the meantime, the onslaught of worms continues its march
— with help from the humans who spread them.


Responses:
[17303] [17295]


17303


Date: October 04, 2020 at 19:49:55
From: kay.so.or, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Invasive Asian worms laying country bare


oh my!!! another example of 'humans spreading disaster'?


Responses:
None


17295


Date: September 30, 2020 at 09:18:21
From: Sunshine, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Invasive Asian worms laying country bare


Eeeewwwww !
Did we really need the picture to go with the article ?
I think not - hehe.
Eeeewwwww !


Responses:
None


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