TL;DR: Observations on earthworm populations in the Carse of Stirling indicate that there are definite differences according to soil type both in total population numbers and in the relative numbers of each species present.
Abstract: Observations on earthworm populations in the Carse of Stirling indicate that there are definite differences according to soil type both in total population numbers and in the relative numbers of each species present. The light and medium loams appear to carry higher total populations than the heavier clay types or the more open gravelly sand or alluvial types. Within and between the respective soil-type populations, species numbers are variable, but the actual numbers present on a soil type do not necessarily indicate the relative importance of each species. In all cases Allolobophora caliginosa is the dominant species, being more numerous on the light loam than elsewhere. A. longa is subdominant and forms a substantial percentage on the medium loam and clay. On the light loam A. longa is high in number, but forms a smaller percentage of the total population because of the abundance of A. caliginosa. A. longa is also of reduced importance on the open soils—gravelly sand and alluvium. This species does not differ very much from Lumbricus rubellus and L. terrestris, as a percentage of the population on these two later soils and the light loam. The percentages of these two species are similar within populations, though much lower on the clay than on the other soils, and the total Lumbricus population number is highest on the light loam and lowest on the clay. There is a fair similarity between the two populations on the two open-textured soils, in both numbers and percentages.
Areas of acid, natural pastures contain earthworm populations low in number and species variety. Some of the species typical of these areas are small active species, e.g. Dendrobaena rubida, D. octaedra and Bimastus eiseni, which are not found in well-established field populations. When agricultural treatment improves an area the acid-pasture species eventually decrease in relative number and importance as the species normally associated with good pasture land become established and build up their populations.
TL;DR: It is proposed that earthworms have a potential in a dual role: (1) as 'quantitative' monitors of total-soil metal concentrations (as shown for Cd); and (2) as estimators of 'ecologically significant' soil metal, integrating the effects of edaphic factors ( as shown for Pb).
TL;DR: The disappearance of litter after 50–52 days appeared to be due to detritivore activity, since the numbers found below the litter were positively and significantly correlated with the litter disappearance, which indicates thatdetritivores use litter as food, and therefore influence the composition of the litter layer.
Abstract: Litterbag experiments with 10 different kinds of leaf litter showed that detritivore (Lumbricus species) and geophagous (Aporrectodea species) earthworms prefer certain litter types over others, since different numbers of worms were found below the litter after 50–52 days of exposure in a pasture The detritivores preferred Fraxinus, Tilia, and predecomposed Ulmus and Fagus litter to Fagus litter and paper, while geophages preferred Tilia litter to Alnus and Ulmus litter, so that the two groups of earthworms showed different preferences The detritivores seemed to be more selective than the geophages The palatability of the litter was examined in relation to the C: N ratio, the lignin concentration and the initial and final polyphenol concentration The numbers of detritivores were significantly correlated with the C: N ratio and the final polyphenol concentration, so that selection of litter seems to be related to palatability The numbers of geophages were not significantly correlated with any of the parameters for palatability The disappearance of litter after 50–52 days appeared to be due to detritivore activity, since the numbers found below the litter were positively and significantly correlated with the litter disappearance There was no significant correlation with geophage activity This indicates that detritivores use litter as food, and therefore influence the composition of the litter layer
TL;DR: Earthworms (Lumbricus rubeltus) were fed on four different soils with light fraction organic material contents but rates of CO2 production, bacterial plate counts, moisture content and concentrations of soluble organic-C were higher in casts compared with the standardized soils ingested by the earthworms.
Abstract: Earthworms (Lumbricus rubeltus) were fed on four different soils with light fraction organic material contents from 3.7 to 76.1% of the soil dry weightand soil water potentials standardized at — 8 kPa. Microbial biomass-C in the soils, as measured with a modified fumigation-extraction method, ranged from 0.4 to 7.5mg C g−1 soil. After gut passage (6–8 h) microbial biomass-C was not changed significantly but rates of CO2 production, bacterial plate counts, moisture content and concentrations of soluble organic-C were higher in casts compared with the standardized soils ingested by the earthworms.
TL;DR: Sodium dodecyl sulfate electrophoresis of Lumbricus hemoglobin in the presence of mercaptoethanol provided a reproducible patterns of six components, four bands with molecular weights of 12,000, 14, thousands, 16,000- and 19,000 - respectively, and two bands with Molecular weights of about 31,000 and 36,000.