- Eisenia foetida
Taxobox | name = "Eisenia fetida"
image_width = 240px
regnum =Animal ia
phylum =Annelid a
classis =Clitellata
ordo =Haplotaxida
familia =Lumbricidae
genus = "Eisenia"
species = "E. fetida"
binomial = "Eisenia fetida"
binomial_authority = (Savigny, 1826) [cite web |url=http://www.faunaeur.org/full_results.php?id=178401 |title="Eisenia fetida" |publisher=Fauna Europaea |year=2004]"Eisenia fetida", known under various
common names , including "redworms", "brandling worms", "tiger worms" and "red wiggler worms", is a species ofearthworm adapted to the environment of decaying organic material. It thrives in rottingvegetation ,compost , andmanure . It is rarely found in soil, and instead, like "Lumbricus rubellus ", prefers conditions where other worms cannot survive. Its specific name arises because, when roughly handled, it exudes a pungent liquid. This is presumably achemical defense mechanism, although there appear to be no direct studies that have confirmed it confers protection against predators. It is closely related to the sibling species "Eisenia andrei", also referred to as "E. fetida andrei". The only simple way of distinguishing them is that "E. fetida" is lighter in colour. Molecular analyses have confirmed their identity as separate species, and breeding experiments have also shown that they do not produce hybrids.They are readily commercially available - primarily they are sold for vermiculture, owing to its remarkable ability to process organic matter into compost, but are also sold as bait. This process is known as vermiculture, with an end result of "
vermicompost ".References
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