Friday, July 15, 2011

In Praise of the Humble Earthworm

“Worms can live on the planet without people; people can’t live on the planet without worms”  Paul Watson (director of Sea Shepherd)

Last year on a patch of lawn in a garden in Kent, UK, I saw one of the longest running scientific experiments in the world – Darwin’s wormstone.  The garden is part of the family home of Charles Darwin – Downe House – and is now a living museum dedicated to his life and work.  His Galapagos voyages are legendary, but Charles Darwin made one of his biggest discoveries at the bottom of his garden. 

“ Of all animals, few have contributed so much to the development of the world, as we know it, as earthworms” Darwin

The experiment, started in about 1839, and still continuing today, measures the displacement of soil under the stone as a result of worm activity (about 2.2mm per annum).

As worms travel through the soil, ingesting mineral and organic material, they break down root mats and leave tunnels for oxygen and water to penetrate the soil.  These tunnels become coated with a nitrate-rich mucus, secreted by the worms, which encourage and feed root growth.

“Earthworms are the intestines of the soil”  Aristotle

Worms are essential for a healthy gardenThey eat their own weight every day and produce the same amount in vermicasts – amazingly these are far richer in minerals than the soil the worm ingested – natural soil fertilizer.  How is this done?


In many soils, earthworms play a major role in converting large pieces of organic matter (e.g. dead leaves) into rich humus -  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 leaves 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 can contain 40% more humus than the top 20 cm of soil in which the worm is living.

As well as dead organic matter, the earthworm also ingests any other soil particles that are small enough—including sand grains up to 1.25mm across—into its gizzard where 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 which are deposited on the surface or deeper in the soil, minerals and plant nutrients are made available in an accessible form. Investigations show that fresh earthworm casts are 5 times richer in available nitrogen, 7 times richer in available phosphates and 11 times richer in available potassium than the surrounding upper 150 mm of soil. (All of this while you were sleeping!)


Darwin estimated that arable land contains up to 53,000 worms per acre (13/m²), but more recent research suggests 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 a farmer's soil could be greater than that of the livestock upon its surface.

How to encourage worms in your garden – just keep adding organic matter e.g. composted manures/grass clippings/wood mulch – and keep topping it up.
The North Downs, Kent, close to Darwin's House.  Beautiful countryside with a wonderful network of public footpaths.



I wonder if Darwin coined the phrase about 'leaving no stone unturned'?


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