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left-of-center2012

(34,195 posts)
Fri Apr 23, 2021, 06:34 PM Apr 2021

Highly Invasive Jumping Worms Have Spread to 15 States

The highly invasive jumping worm, a genus introduced from eastern Asia, now writhes within the topsoil of more than a dozen states in the Midwest. After jumping worms feed their insatiable appetites, they leave behind loose, granular soil the texture of coffee grounds. This altered soil can no longer retain moisture, lacks nutrients and quickly erodes, jeopardizing gardens and forest ecosystems, reports Will Cushman for PBS Wisconsin.

The jumping worms may have been brought to North America in the 19th century with plants and other imported horticultural and agricultural materials. Since then, the worms have spread. As of 2021, the invaders can be found in Wisconsin, Missouri, Illinois, Iowa, Minnesota, Nebraska, Ohio, Texas, Louisiana, Indiana, Kansas, Indiana, Kentucky, Tennessee and Oklahoma, reports Jason Murdock for Newsweek.

The invasive worm resembles the more common European nightcrawler but is slightly smaller, a brownish color rather than pink and appears sleeker and smoother, reports Newsweek. The segmented invertebrates are also known as Asian jumping worms, crazy worms, Alabama jumpers and snake worms. As their various names suggest, the worms thrash and snap their bodies intensely like a rattlesnake when touched or held, can spring into the air and even shed their tail to escape, PBS Wisconsin reports.

https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/highly-invasive-jumping-worms-have-spread-15-us-states-180977566/

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Highly Invasive Jumping Worms Have Spread to 15 States (Original Post) left-of-center2012 Apr 2021 OP
Wonder, any good for fishing? Dan Apr 2021 #1
lol, I thought the same. intheflow Apr 2021 #4
...altered soil can no longer retain moisture, lacks nutrients and quickly erodes, jeopardizing gard riversedge Apr 2021 #2
Ick! Like proto-snakes. intheflow Apr 2021 #3
Nasty - I always liked worms til now. alittlelark Apr 2021 #5
Time to get a flock of ducks. Bantamfancier Apr 2021 #6
Sounds like a precursor to the movie Interstellar. Ilsa Apr 2021 #7

Dan

(3,541 posts)
1. Wonder, any good for fishing?
Fri Apr 23, 2021, 06:38 PM
Apr 2021

When I was youngster in Oklahoma, went fishing all the time and never found any worms like the above.

riversedge

(70,177 posts)
2. ...altered soil can no longer retain moisture, lacks nutrients and quickly erodes, jeopardizing gard
Fri Apr 23, 2021, 06:42 PM
Apr 2021

crap. crap.

.............After jumping worms feed their insatiable appetites, they leave behind loose, granular soil the texture of coffee grounds. This altered soil can no longer retain moisture, lacks nutrients and quickly erodes, jeopardizing gardens and forest ecosystems, reports Will Cushman for PBS Wisconsin.

alittlelark

(18,890 posts)
5. Nasty - I always liked worms til now.
Fri Apr 23, 2021, 07:51 PM
Apr 2021

I would regularly throw out bird seed in areas they infested - fortunately they are not here...........yet.

Ilsa

(61,690 posts)
7. Sounds like a precursor to the movie Interstellar.
Fri Apr 23, 2021, 09:43 PM
Apr 2021

Earth was dying because crops wouldn't grow (fungus, maybe?). The only thing left was a hardy corn.

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