its cylinder like shape and its sliminess helps it be able to slide through the soil with ease.
Earthworms help by fertilizing the soil with their waste.
Yes!
Yes, they fertilize the soil which will help crops grow.
Earthworms live in the soil. Earthworms however will only live in soil where there is food, moisture, oxygen and a favourable temperature. If they don't have these things, they will go somewhere else.
An earthworm is a subterranean animal, meaning it lives underground in soil or other moist environments. It burrows through the soil, helping to aerate and mix it. Earthworms are not aquatic animals and do not live in water.
An earthworm's ability to dig through soil is aided by its strong, muscular body and the hydraulic pressure created by its body fluids. The earthworm's setae, tiny bristle-like structures on its body, also help it grip onto soil particles as it moves. These structures are located along the earthworm's body segments.
Well... You can't. Earthworms have a tendency to eat dirt since they live in it. So practically, they eat dirt and they dispose it! If you cut open a worm, you would see mostly dirt because that's what's inside! They eat it... They dispose of it... They live it.
because worms help the soil for plants to grow and worms recycle wow i know
An earthworm, while moving, chews up some soil and spits out the same amount of soil back into the ground. The soil which was eaten becomes fertile and more plants will grow on fertile soil. therefore, an earthworm helps a farmer by making soil fertile.
By aerating and breaking up the soil it allows rainwater to penetrate easier and loosens the soil so that roots can take better hold.
By aerating and breaking up the soil it allows rainwater to penetrate easier and loosens the soil so that roots can take better hold.
earthworm