Setae
Earthworms cling to soil using their setae, which are tiny bristles located on their body. These setae help the earthworms move through the soil by gripping and anchoring onto the soil particles. This allows the earthworms to burrow efficiently and navigate through their environment.
Earthworms breath through their glands and out of their nostrils.....
Earthworms will eat through anything in the soil and get they're energy and water from what they consume.
yes earthworms do breath in dirt they do this through their skin as they have moist skin
earthworms are moist because gases can pass easily them as they breath through the skin
Setae are bristles or hair-like structures that help attach the earthworm to the ground and create friction so if an earthworm is going down a hill, it would slide down but actually continue to move through hydrostatic pressure.
No. They breathe through their skin
The movement of earthworms is achieved through the contraction and expansion of their circular and longitudinal muscles along their body segments. They use their hydrostatic skeleton to push themselves forward by anchoring the front end of their body and lengthening the rear end. This movement allows them to burrow through the soil and navigate their environment efficiently.
through it's skin
Through their butts.
No, earthworms do not go through metamorphosis. They hatch from eggs as small versions of adult worms and grow in size as they mature.
Bristles also known as setae. They work as legs; they grip to soil with the setae. Setae also can dig through soil.