Where Do Worms Live?
Worms live almost everywhere on Earth! They inhabit soil, freshwater, oceans, and even inside other animals as parasites.
Earthworms live in soil! They tunnel through dirt, creating extensive burrow systems. Some burrows reach 6 feet deep! Earthworms prefer moist soil rich in organic matter (dead leaves, plant material). They're found in gardens, forests, fields, and lawns worldwide! Well-aerated soil can contain 1 million earthworms per acre!
Earthworms can't survive everywhere! They avoid very dry, very wet (waterlogged), very hot, or very cold conditions. Deserts have few earthworms. Extreme cold kills them (though some species survive freezing). Perfect worm habitat is moist (but not waterlogged), cool, and rich in organic material.
Worms burrow deeper in winter! As soil freezes, earthworms dig below the frost line where soil stays unfrozen. They enter dormancy, curled in chambers lined with mucus. In spring, warming soil brings worms back to surface layers!
Marine worms live in oceans! Bristle worms (polychaetes) inhabit seafloors from tide pools to deep trenches. Christmas tree worms embed in coral, extending feathery crowns to filter food from water. Tube worms create protective tubes from sand, mucus, or calcium. Some worms live near hydrothermal vents in pitch-black depths!
Flatworms live in diverse habitats! Free-living planarians inhabit freshwater streams under rocks. They glide on slime trails like snails! Parasitic flatworms (tapeworms, flukes) live inside hosts - fish, birds, mammals, even humans! Tapeworms inhabit intestines, absorbing nutrients from host's food.
Roundworms are everywhere! They're found in every environment - soil, water, plants, animals! Some estimate four out of five animals on Earth are nematodes! Most are microscopic and beneficial, breaking down dead material. Some are harmful parasites affecting plants and animals.
Leeches love freshwater! Most leeches live in ponds, lakes, streams, and swamps. They hide under rocks, vegetation, or debris. Some leeches live in moist soil or trees in rainforests! When people wade through water, leeches detect vibrations and swim toward them, seeking a blood meal!
Some worms survive freezing! Antarctic ice worms live in glaciers! They thrive in ice at near-freezing temperatures. If warmed above 40°F (5°C), these worms die! They're designed specifically for icy environments - their bodies would literally fall apart in warm conditions!
What Do Worms Eat?
Worm diets vary dramatically! Different groups eat completely different things.
Earthworms are decomposers:
- Dead leaves and plant material
- Decaying roots and organic matter
- Bacteria and fungi in soil
- Microscopic organisms
- They pull leaves into burrows to eat underground
- Earthworms literally eat dirt, extracting nutrients!
How earthworms eat:
- No teeth - worms swallow food whole!
- Food enters mouth, travels to crop (storage organ)
- Moves to gizzard - muscular organ with sand/small stones
- Gizzard grinds food like a mill
- Digested nutrients absorbed in intestine
- Waste exits as castings (worm poop)
Worm castings are valuable! Earthworm poop enriches soil! Castings contain nutrients in forms plants easily absorb. Gardeners love earthworms because their castings make soil incredibly fertile! One earthworm produces its weight in castings daily!
Leeches are mostly predators/parasites:
- Blood from fish, amphibians, birds, or mammals
- Some eat small invertebrates (snails, worms, insect larvae)
- Scavengers eat dead animals
- Leeches have three jaws with tiny teeth
- They inject anticoagulants preventing blood from clotting
- One blood meal can last months!
Marine worms have diverse diets:
- Filter feeders catch plankton from water
- Predators hunt small animals
- Scavengers eat dead material on seafloor
- Some burrow through mud, extracting nutrients
- Tube worms near vents rely on bacteria in their bodies for food!
Parasitic worms steal from hosts:
- Tapeworms absorb nutrients from host intestines
- Roundworms eat host's food or body tissues
- Some cause serious diseases in humans and animals
- Hookworms attach to intestinal walls and feed on blood
Earthworms improve soil! As they burrow and eat, earthworms: mix soil layers, create air passages, improve water drainage, break down organic matter, and fertilize with castings! Farmers and gardeners consider earthworms essential for healthy soil. Areas with abundant earthworms have much more productive land!
Planarian flatworms are predators! They hunt tiny animals like insect larvae, small crustaceans, and even other worms. Planarians extend a tube-like pharynx from their underside, inject digestive enzymes into prey, and suck up liquefied food! It's gruesome but effective!