Yes, they do. It came straight out of my Science book. I assume that whoever is searching this up was like me and either to lazy to bring their book home, or just to lazy to open it up. Haha, good luck!
Yes earthworms do the most wok of mixing humus with other materials in soil
this is true
this is true
Earthworms do most of the work of mixing humus with other materials in soil. Earthworms and burrowing animals also help aerate, or mix air into, the soil.
Humus is formed when organic material (such as leaves , dead animals etc) is disgraded by a combination of fungi,bacteria,microbes and other animals((earthworms for example) that reside in the soil.
Lime, humus and two others,& 2 other boobs-i mean things
HUMUS IS A DARK-COLORED,MINERAL SUBSTANCE THAT DEVELOPS AS DEAD PLANTS AND ANIMALS.loam is soil with a crumbly texture that is made of equal parts of clay,sand,and silt.
Carrying out various tests such as heating or mixing with other chemicals can help to identify unknown materials. Heating can give different smells and different colors.
Earthworms are generally solitary. large groups of earthworms usually congregate because of good soil conditions, not because of other worms. Earthworms are generally solitary. large groups of earthworms usually congregate because of good soil conditions, not because of other worms.
The O-Horizon
Because earthworms eat just about every other organism in the soil.
The only native earthworms in Illinois are red worm Eisenia fetida and the nightcrawler Lumbricus terrestris. Other earthworms have come from Europe in soil samples, food supplies, other ship cargo.
Earthworms cannot bite humans or any other species like millipedes but they can eat grass and digest circulate blood excrete and breathe