yes they can its true
A nematologist studies worms and how they react to the dirt that they live in.Basicaly, a nematologist studies a worms life and how they work
Nematodes are tiny little worms (somewhat like earthworms but far smaller). They just crawl around and swallow whatever organic matter they happen to find.
Probably fungus gnat larva. They wiggle around on the surface of the soil when you water it and are smaller than 1cm.
No, the platypus is a carnivore. It feeds on annelid worms, tiny shrimp and annelid worms that live at the bottom of freshwater creeks and rivers.
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.
silk worms are tiny worms hanging from silk on a tree
They're great for the soil... They aerate the soil by creating tiny tunnels as the move. Also - they eat decaying leaves and other vegetable matter from the surface - turning it into fertiliser which is excreted again as the worm travels through the soil !
No
Worms have very tiny brains.
Yes, they will. They like them best if mixed in soil.
Tiny organisms such as worms help soil by giving off enzymes and hormones to help give the soil nutrients and water. Tiny organisms also help carry and spread water in the soil so that each plant gets its own share of nutrients. Also the insects that eat at dead things that start to decompose, those insects also carry nutrients into the soil so that way the soil becomes richer and healthy plants can grow healthier and faster.
No. Worms are hatched from a cocoon as tiny worms - there is no larval stage.