Search results for "Earthworm"

showing 10 items of 54 documents

Growth increase of birch seedlings under the influence of earthworms—a laboratory study

1992

The effects of the earthworm Lumbricus rubellus (Hoffm.) on net production and nitrogen content of birch seedlings were studied in laboratory microcosms. Coniferous forest floors with litter, humus and mineral horizons were simulated in transparent plastic cylinders. The materials were partially sterilized by microwaving, and re-inoculated with microflora and -fauna. A young (9 cm) birch seedling (Betula pendula Roth) was planted in each container. Earthworms were added to half of the replicates. The microcosms, through which a constant air flow was maintained, were incubated in a climate chamber. After two growth periods, leaf and stem biomasses of birch in treatments with earthworms incre…

biologySoil biologyEarthwormSoil ScienceLumbricus rubellusbiology.organism_classificationMicrobiologyHumusHorticultureBetula pendulaSeedlingbiology.animalBotanyLitterLumbricidaeSoil Biology and Biochemistry
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Responses of soil decomposer animals to wood-ash fertilisation and burning in a coniferous forest stand

2000

Abstract Responses of soil decomposer animals (enchytraeids and microarthropods) to wood-ash fertilisation (1000 and 5000 kg ha−1) and a fire treatment mimicking prescribed burning were studied in a Scots pine stand in central Finland. The experiment was conducted on 30 × 30 m2 plots, each treatment being replicated four times. Soil animals were sampled throughout the growing season in the third year after the treatments. As a rule, numbers of soil animals increased during the study period. Numbers of the only enchytraeid worm species found at the study site, Cognettia sphagnetorum, were lower in the plots with higher ash level and plots which have been burned. In the plots having these tre…

biologySoil biologyPrescribed burnEarthwormScots pineGrowing seasonForestryWood ashManagement Monitoring Policy and Lawbiology.organism_classificationcomplex mixturesHumusDecomposerAgronomyBotanyNature and Landscape ConservationForest Ecology and Management
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Effects of endogeic earthworms on soil processes and plant growth in coniferous forest soil

1992

The effects of the endogeic earthworm, Aporrectodea caliginosa tuberculata (Eisen) on decomposition processes in moist coniferous forest soil were studied in the laboratory. The pH preference of this species and its effects on microbial activity, N and P mineralization, and the growth of birch seedlings were determined in separate pot experiments. Homogenized humus from a spruce stand was shown to be too acid for A. c. tuberculata. After liming, the earthworms thrived in the humus and their biomass increased (at pH above 4.8). In later experiments in which the humus was limed, the earthworms positively influenced the biological activity in humus and also increased the rate of N mineralizati…

biologySoil biologyfungiEarthwormSoil ScienceMineralization (soil science)engineering.materialbiology.organism_classificationMicrobiologyHumusAgronomySeedlingbiology.animalBotanySoil waterengineeringLumbricidaeFertilizerAgronomy and Crop ScienceBiology and Fertility of Soils
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Effects of heavy metals on earthworms along contamination gradients in organic rich soils.

2003

Earthworm communities and metal (bio)availability to earthworms along contamination gradients was studied in order to support chemical analyses in risk assessment of metal contaminated soils. Earthworms were sampled in three metal contaminated areas with different habitat and soil properties in Finland. Earthworm and soil samples were collected at three distances (1, 2, and 4 km) from the emission sources. Earthworms were identified as to species and analyzed for heavy metals. Total soil metal concentrations were analyzed using an ultrasound-assisted extraction method and bioavailable metal fraction was estimated by acetic acid extraction. In two of the three areas studied, heavy metal conc…

biologySoil testEcologyHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisEarthwormExtraction (chemistry)Population DynamicsPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthBiomassBiological AvailabilityGeneral MedicineContaminationbiology.organism_classificationPollutionRisk AssessmentOligochaetaEnvironmental chemistryMetals HeavySoil waterEcotoxicologyEnvironmental scienceAnimalsSoil PollutantsBiomassOligochaetaEcotoxicology and environmental safety
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Effect of earthworms on decomposition processes in raw humus forest soil: A microcosm study

1990

The earthworms Lumbricus rubellus (Hoffmeister) and Dendrobaena octaedra (Savigny) were studied in the laboratory to determine their effects on decomposition and nutrient cycling in coniferous forest soil. CO2 evolution was monitored, and pH, PO 4 3− −P, NH 4 + −N, NO 3 − −N, total N, and total C in the leaching waters were measured. After three destructive samplings, numbers of animals, mass loss, pH, and KCl-extractable nutrients were analysed. The earthworms clearly enhanced the mass loss of the substrate, especially that of litter. L. rubellus stimulated microbial respiration by 15–18%, whereas D. octaedra stimulated it only slightly. The worms significantly raised the pH of the leachin…

chemistry.chemical_classificationNutrient cycleSoil organic matterSoil biologyEarthwormSoil ScienceSoil scienceBiologyLumbricus rubellusbiology.organism_classificationMicrobiologyHumuschemistrySoil pHEnvironmental chemistryOrganic matterAgronomy and Crop ScienceBiology and Fertility of Soils
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Microfungal community structure in anthropogenic birch stands in central Finland

2002

We describe the soil microfungal communities in 30-year-old birch (Betula pendula Roth) stands planted either on former spruce forest soil (BS) or on former arable soil (BF) and compare these with the soil microfungal communities in spruce forests (S), arable fields (F) and old deciduous forests (D). Fungi were isolated from 0- to 3-cm and 3- to 6-cm samples collected in September 1997 and May 1998. Principal components analysis differentiated fungal communities in the S and BS sites from those in the other site types. The Morisita-Horn index of similarity indicated that fungal communities in the F and BF sites were less similar to those in the other site types. Fungal communities of the BS…

chemistry.chemical_classificationbiologyEcologyEarthwormCommunity structureSoil Sciencebiology.organism_classificationMicrobiologyDeciduouschemistryBetula pendulaLitterAfforestationOrganic matterArable landAgronomy and Crop ScienceBiology and Fertility of Soils
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Responses of two earthworm populations with different exposure histories to chlorophenol contamination

1998

Two populations of the earthworm Aporrectodea tuberculata (Eisen), one from a chlorophenol contaminated and another from an uncontaminated site in central Finland, were exposed to acute, toxic, and sublethal concentrations of pentachlorophenol (PCP). Exposure history seemed to have only slight effect on the responses of the earthworms. Values of a lethal concentration of 50% in the humus-rich soil were very high, 1,870 μg PCP per gram for the earthworms from the contaminated site and 1,520 μg/g for the earthworms from the uncontaminated site. No differences in the accumulation of PCP from the soil into the earthworms between the two populations were found. Earthworms from both populations s…

chemistry.chemical_classificationbiologyEcologyHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisSoil biologySoil organic matterEarthwormbiology.organism_classificationSoil contaminationPentachlorophenolchemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryOligochaetaEnvironmental chemistrySoil waterEnvironmental ChemistryOrganic matterEnvironmental Toxicology and Chemistry
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Patterns of earthworm, enchytraeid and nematode diversity and community structure in urban soils of different ages

2016

Annelids (Lumbricidae and Enchytraeidae) and nematodes are common soil organisms and play important roles in organic matter decomposition, nutrient cycling and creation of soil structure and porosity. However, these three groups have rarely been studied together and only few studies exist for urban soils. We studied the diversity and community composition of annelids and nematodes in soils spanning more than two centuries of urban soil development in Neuchâtel (Switzerland) and assessed the relationships 1) among these three groups and 2) between each group and environmental (physical, chemical and functional) characteristics of soils and soil age. While the groups of environmental variable…

chemistry.chemical_classificationbiologySoil biodiversityEcologySoil biologyEarthwormSoil Science04 agricultural and veterinary sciences010501 environmental sciencesbiology.organism_classification01 natural sciencesMicrobiologySoil qualitySoil structurechemistryAgronomyInsect ScienceSoil water040103 agronomy & agriculture0401 agriculture forestry and fisheriesSoil ecologyOrganic matter0105 earth and related environmental sciences
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Effects of earthworms on decomposition and metal availability in contaminated soil: Microcosm studies of populations with different exposure histories

2006

Abstract Population-specific differences in the responses of earthworms to simultaneous exposure to Cu and Zn were studied in microcosm experiments. Two populations of Aporrectodea caliginosa tuberculata (Eisen) with different metal exposure histories were chosen for the studies. Microcosms were prepared containing either uncontaminated soil or soils with low or high combined Cu/Zn -concentrations (79/139 or 178/311 mg kg −1 dry mass of soil, respectively). Earthworms from each population were introduced to the microcosm treatments with some microcosms serving as controls without earthworms. One series of microcosms was destructively sampled after 16 weeks incubation in a climate chamber. S…

education.field_of_studySoil testbiologyChemistryPopulationEarthwormSoil Sciencebiology.organism_classificationMicrobiologySoil contaminationSoil respirationEnvironmental chemistrybiology.animalSoil waterLumbricidaeeducationMicrocosmSoil Biology and Biochemistry
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Immunotoxicity of metal nanoparticles in Eisenia andrei earthworms

2022

En los últimos años, la producción de nanopartículas (NPs) ha aumentado dando lugar a que su liberación al medio ambiente haya incrementado. Tanto la liberación ambiental como su desecho se está convirtiendo en una preocupación emergente ya que las NPs alcanzarían los ecosistemas terrestres como acuáticos, presentando problemas de toxicidad para los organismos vivos. En los ecosistemas terrestres, las lombrices de tierra Eisenia andrei son invertebrados típicamente utilizados como organismos modelo en estudios de ecotoxicidad con un sistema inmunológico innato que protege a los animales contra contaminantes, bacterias, hongos y virus que se encuentran en el suelo. El objetivo general de est…

immunotoxicityestrés oxidativoUNESCO::CIENCIAS DE LA VIDAlombricesearthwormseisenia andreinanopartículas:CIENCIAS DE LA VIDA [UNESCO]
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