Page:The Formation of Vegetable Mould through the Action of Worms (1881).djvu/27

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Chap. I.
NOCTURNAL.
13

other hand he kept several large worms alive for nearly four months, completely submerged in water.[1] During the summer when the ground is dry, they penetrate to a considerable depth and cease to work, as they do during the winter when the ground is frozen. Worms are nocturnal in their habits, and at night may be seen crawling about in large numbers, but usually with their tails still inserted in their burrows. By the expansion of this part of their bodies, and with the help of the short, slightly reflexed bristles, with which their bodies are armed, they hold so fast that they can seldom be dragged out of the ground without being torn into pieces.[2] During the day they remain in their burrows, except at the pairing season, when those which inhabit adjoining burrows expose the greater part of their bodies for an hour or two in the early morning. Sick

  1. I shall have occasion often to refer to M. Perrier's admirable memoir, 'Organisation des Lombriciens terrestres' in 'Archives de Zoolog. expér.' tom. iii. 1874, p. 372. C. F. Morren ('De Lumbrici terrestris,' 1829, p. 14) found that worms endured immersion for fifteen to twenty days in summer, but that in winter they died when thus treated.
  2. Morren, 'De Lumbrici terrestris,' &c., 1829, p. 67.