Page:The Formation of Vegetable Mould through the Action of Worms (1881).djvu/113

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Chap. II.
EXCAVATION OF THEIR BURROWS.
99

anterior extremity of its body into any little crevice, or hole; and then, as Perrier remarks,[1] the pharynx is pushed forwards into this part, which consequently swells and pushes away the earth on all sides. The anterior extremity thus serves as a wedge. It also serves, as we have before seen, for prehension and suction, and as a tactile organ. A worm was placed on loose mould, and it buried itself in between two and three minutes. On another occasion four worms disappeared in 15 minutes between the sides of the pot and the earth, which had been moderately pressed down. On a third occasion three large worms and a small one were placed on loose mould well mixed with fine sand and firmly pressed down, and they all disappeared, except the tail of one, in 35 minutes. On a fourth occasion six large worms were placed on argillaceous mud mixed with sand firmly pressed down, and they disappeared, except the extreme tips of the tails of two of them, in 40 minutes. In none of these cases, did the worms swallow, as far as could be seen, any earth. They

  1. 'Archives de Zoolog. expér.' tom. iii. 1874, p. 405.