yes .if you see a large black worm , catch it and give it a dead worm .see what hapins. but do not let it get to your skin . it has tiny sharp teeth that can cut thrugh thick matereals . if you have catched the worm and ist gon mising and have a realy , realy ugly bump wich is black , brown or grey go strat to the docter.
Yes, you did incorrectly spell "half". When a worms body is severed, you will usually just have two pieces of a dead worm, though if the worm was cut below the head, sometimes, they can regenerate the tail. Worms do not reproduce in this way.
no
Maggets
I believe that flesh eating worms eat blood...
worms are niether herbivores nor canivores, they are decomposers that recycle dead or dying particles in the soils.
They are eating the dead worms parts. - Savannah
Worm, flesh-eating insects, stank. He's dead.
It depends on your definition of 'worm'. Earth worms and water worms both belong to the Phylum Annelid, if all Annelids are worms then water worms are worms.
A worm is a decomposer because worms eat waste. They eat dead or decaying organisms such as dead leaves, road kill, dead plants, etc. However they do not eat decaying/rotting foods. Scavengers eat rotting food not decomposers.
One kind is earthworms. Another one is a Tape worm. The word is correctly spelled as "Segmented".
There is such a thing as true worms. Some examples would be earth worms, red wrigglers, blood worms etc.
earth worms