Invading Earthworms
11/30/2002
Science
News Science News
By S. Milius
Invading
earthworms threaten rare U.S.
fern. . .
In the
ecological equivalent of the dreaded Klez Worm burrowing into computers around
the world, European earthworms are eating enough leaf litter in North American
forests to put a rare fern at risk of extinction.
An
unusual study reports that the goblin fern (Botrychium mormo), an elusive
species that pokes up from thick leaf litter on a forest floor, has disappeared
from 9 out of 28 patches surveyed in Minnesota's Chippewa National Forest.
Michael J. Gundale, now at the University
of Montana in Missoula, also found that the normal forest
carpet of fallen leaves was thin in all nine spots, and in eight of them, the
forest floor was wriggling with the earthworm Lumbricus rubellus. In a lab
test, these 3-to-4-centimeter-long worms proved capable of reducing a forest
carpet to a balding remnant, Gundale reports in the December Conservation
Biology.
"This
is the first paper that looks at the response of a native plant to exotic,
invasive earthworms," says Gundale.
Another
chronicler of earthworm invasions, Patrick Bohlen of Archbold Biological
Station in Lake Placid, Fla., welcomes the study. Although he and
other scientists have studied what earthworms do to soil, "very little
research has focused on the effects on plants," he notes.
North
America north of a line from Massachusetts to Iowa has no native
earthworms, Bohlen explains. Scientists presume that the last big glaciers
creeping down from Canada
wiped out any wormy ancestors, and southern species haven't advanced far into
the territory.
When
European settlers colonized the New World,
earthworms came, too. Worms
could have hitchhiked in soil used for ship ballast or in the root balls of
plants. Even today, commercial bait worms escape their fate and take up
residence around resorts.
Farmers
have traditionally regarded earthworms as their friends because these burrowers
aerate soil and can speed the release of nutrients as they eat fallen leaves.
Bohlen says that his research shows that worms' effects on soil nutrients can
get complicated.
Gundale
suspected that earthworms could be quite a shock to a forest that hadn't hosted
any for thousands of years. To see how forest plants might react, Gundale
revisited sites where surveyors had found goblin ferns during the past 6 years.
He found no significant link between disappearances of goblin ferns and the
presence of a small exotic earthworm, Dendrobaena octaedra. However, the bigger
L. rubellus was indeed associated with the disappearances. In places with this
worm, the leaf litter was about half the thickness of the cushion in forest
spots with no earthworms. In only 3 of the 11 sites with L. rubellus did the
fern persist.
To determine
whether worms could actually cause the thinning--instead of just moving into
low-litter spots--Gundale raised worm colonies in buckets of leaves and soil in
his lab. The earthworms did indeed consume the upper layer of litter and reduce
it to castings that mixed in with the soil below.
These
observations support the hypothesis that the ferns are dependent on a leafy
cushion on the forest floor and "that the removal of this [layer] by
exotic earthworms may lead to the extinction of this species," warns Gundale.
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