Well when it rains worms feel the vibrations from the raindrops hitting the ground and come out. That how birds get them and that's why you find lots of worms when your digging in the garden (vibrations from the shovel)
A worm does not make soil, it fertilizes it, first it eats the soil, and it goes through its digestive system and then it poops it out, but when the soil was in the digestive system minerals and such were added, and it came as more of a fertilizer, than regular soil.
Worms are animals. While they can live out of the ground, they do not grow "out of the ground;" they live in the ground.
the sound of rain
soil juice
the worm stirs up the soil to moisture it
It's a fairly small brownish worm that lives in the earth. They eat the soil under us to poop it out and make good new soil (eww)
Worm farms are beneficial both to the farm owner and to the planet. You make nutritional soil to use and that soil helps the planet by being nutritional.
Yes, an earth worm is a Detritivore. It dwells in the soil and feeds on detritus such as soil with an organic component.
A worm.
Earthworms eat the soil, and excrete what they don't digest - leaving tiny piles of 'worm-poop' in the soil. This breaks down and adds to the general composition of the soil.
Yes, a worm that is longer digs through the soil quicker because it is maturer.
A worm lives in soil.
Setae is what a worm uses to cling to soil.
Worms eat up dead leaves or plants and leave waste that helps soil grow plants more easily.
The worm helps to loosen the soil, and it's castings are rich in organic materials, but the primary function of worms is to act as a marker that the soil is rich in organic material, as they will not inhabit very poor soil. It is good to have worms in your garden, but their importance to the soil's health has been greatly exaggerated in the past. They do - a tiny bit - make the soil healthier, but mostly they just show that the soil is good soil.