Worms have semi-porous skin like ours, and they easily absorb anything that touches them small enough to pass between their pores. They don't have proper mouths, they basically digest anything touching them. They like to stay in wet areas because the water carries lots of nutrients, so that's why if it rains they come up. When it's sunny, they go below ground to hang out in stagnant groundwater.
In other words, worms do not eat leaves unless the leaves are dead and decaying, and they stumble across one. Moth and butterfly larvae eat leaves, and they have mouths. Butterflies do not have mouths however, and have a life span of less than a week.
Dirt can turn into mud when it gets wet from water or rain, but when the water evaporates, the mud can dry back into dirt. This cycle can happen depending on the presence of water or other wet conditions.
Soil can turn into mud when water is poured into it if there is a high clay content in the soil. Clay particles can absorb water and create a muddy consistency. Sandier soils are less likely to turn into mud when water is added.
Dried mud does not typically turn into rock. Rock formation usually involves a longer process that includes pressure, heat, and mineralization. Dried mud may harden but is not the same as forming a rock.
* Acoelomorpha * Platyhelminthes (flatworms) * ** Cestoda (tapeworms) ** Trematoda (flukes) ** Monogenea ** Turbellaria (planarians) * Acanthocephales * Kinorhyncha (mud dragons) * Annelida (segmented worms ) * ** Polychaeta ** Oligochaeta ** Hirudinida (leeches) * Nemertea(ribbon worms ) * Echiura (spoon worms ) * Sipuncula(peanut worms ) * Nematoda (roundworms) * Nematomorpha (horsehair worms or gordian worms ) * Priapulida (penis worms ) * Gnathostomulida (jaw worms )
Mud compacts and hardens over millions of years to form sedimentary rock, such as shale or mudstone. The pressure and heat from the layers above accelerate the process of lithification, transforming the mud into solid rock.
Mud, since they live in it.
Worms have very tiny brains.
Water, or mud.
no they do not eat mud they eat worms,small bugs,and all kind of dead fish
Black and Gary worm's pictures
Worms Will Turn was created on 1914-07-21.
I was asking you. They live in the mud. in which country?
Most likely not unless it is a mud cake
nothing, worms are just worms.
The worms were squirming in the mud. The little boy was squirming in his seat.
kiwi
Yes, sand can turn into mud when mixed with water. Water breaks down the sand particles and creates a mixture that has the properties of mud.