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1 50% of the energy was allocated to annelids (earthworms).
2 ults showed that MCs could bioaccumulated in earthworm.
3 at was absent from soil yet observed in most earthworms.
4 nt protective effects against Cu toxicity to earthworms.
5 rmed As accumulation in the coelom of intact earthworms.
6 spatio-temporal database of introduced alien earthworms.
7 nd adapted for feeding on social insects and earthworms.
8 e rotifers, freshwater mussels, daphnids and earthworms.
9 low and deep soil, perhaps through mixing by earthworms.
10 hich suggests size-selective egestion by the earthworms.
11  increased soil C storage in the presence of earthworms.
12  The (68)Znen/(64)Znen ratios determined for earthworms (1.09 +/- 0.04), soils (1.09 +/- 0.02), and p
13 redators, suspension feeders and terrestrial earthworms(1).
14 ty increased in inoculated seedlings without earthworms 12 months after inoculation, and general nega
15                    Further, a field study on earthworms (18 pooled samples) in sludge-amended soil wa
16  tip density in inoculated seedlings without earthworms 6 months after inoculation, lower fine root t
17 on agriculture [CA]) significantly increased earthworm abundance (mean increase of 137% and 127%, res
18 production of key crops by analyzing maps of earthworm abundance, soil properties, and crop yields to
19 phytoaccumulation was minimal (BAF(dw) < 1), earthworms accumulated high loads (BAF(dw) up to 23), su
20 es Darwin, but several recent syntheses link earthworm activities to higher greenhouse gas emissions,
21 ot system parameters and mycorrhization, how earthworms affect the bare root system, and if mycorrhiz
22 ray and finally study slices within a living earthworm, allowing metabolite changes to be discerned w
23 ht; (c) set-up of the control plots (i.e. no earthworms, ambient nitrogen) used in this experiment.
24 derstand the joint effects of TNT and RDX on earthworms, an important ecological and bioindicator spe
25                              We collected 52 earthworm and soil samples from arable and forest ecosys
26 oil RQ values indicated low level of risk to earthworms and arthropods.
27 0 +/- 2670 and 3000 +/- 200 mug/kg lipid for earthworms and detritivorous woodlice, respectively).
28                                      Snails, earthworms and flatworms are remarkably different animal
29 n nature, from individual organisms (notably earthworms and hydra), through communities of microbes,
30 ion site and is nontoxic to nerve tissues in earthworms and mammals, we have also developed in vivo p
31 oken down through the synergistic actions of earthworms and microbial communities.
32      However, in plots receiving both exotic earthworms and N addition, such earthworm effects on the
33  three-level food web of predaceous beetles, earthworms and plants, Zhao et al. (2013) report evidenc
34 ommon in plants and bees but intermittent in earthworms and spiders.
35  We conclude that the coordinated actions of earthworms and their associated soil biota were responsi
36  of these two important ecological groups of earthworms and their burrowing, feeding and casting acti
37    High abundance of an invasive pantropical earthworm (and the absence of indigenous lumbricid speci
38 the endogeic Aporrectodea rosea (rosy-tipped earthworm) and planted with Lolium perenne (perennial ry
39 tional groups of termites, ants, beetles and earthworms, and an increase in the abundance of small ma
40                           This suggests that earthworms, and probably other soil organisms, constitut
41  to homologous genes from crayfish, insects, earthworms, and sea urchins.
42 and 'brown' belowground (soil arthropods and earthworms) animal food webs in tropical rainforests and
43 ting key ecological functions: trees, fungi, earthworms, ants and spiders.
44 and if mycorrhization parameters change when earthworms are added to the inoculation substrate.
45                                              Earthworms are among the most important soil dwelling in
46  our study provides evidence that introduced earthworms are associated with declines in plant diversi
47                                              Earthworms are critical in regulating soil processes and
48                                              Earthworms are critical soil ecosystem engineers that su
49                                              Earthworms are globally distributed and perform essentia
50          As a consequence, soil taxa such as earthworms are iconic in good land management practices.
51                    Our findings suggest that earthworms are important drivers of global food producti
52             Our results therefore imply that earthworms are of crucial importance to decrease the yie
53                    Soil organisms, including earthworms, are a key component of terrestrial ecosystem
54                                     However, earthworms as major detritivores stayed unchanged in the
55                                          The earthworm-associated microbiome differs from the surroun
56                                              Earthworm Au concentrations were continuously monitored
57                      The positive effects of earthworms become larger when more residue is returned t
58 ake and elimination pathways when predicting earthworm bioconcentration.
59 that correlated with soil C content, such as earthworm biomass and fungal/bacterial energy channel ra
60  groups) tended to decrease, with increasing earthworm biomass.
61  a case study on the role of root growth and earthworm bioturbation in restoring the structure of a s
62 ated AC were comparable to those measured by earthworm biouptake (bioavailability) at both dose level
63 doalkyl betaine (6:2 FTAB) bioaccumulated in earthworms [BSAF ~ 2.5-5.4 (g(dw,worm)/g(dw,soil))(-1)]
64 ficant effects on the survival and growth of earthworms, but significantly reduced cocoon and juvenil
65 act as vectors to increase metal exposure in earthworms, but that the associated risk is unlikely to
66 n dating protocol has been developed to date earthworm calcite granules from the reference loess sequ
67                       Soft organisms such as earthworms can access confined, narrow spaces, inspiring
68          Bacterial and fungal communities of earthworm casts were mainly composed of microbial taxa n
69 ecific cellular or molecular level damage to earthworms caused by chronic exposure to TiO(2) are warr
70 a distinct bacterial community defines these earthworms, clear family- and species-level modification
71 cal improvements enabled by the radiocarbon "earthworm clock" thus strongly enhance our understanding
72  in cytotoxicity of dissolved silver salt on earthworm coelomocytes and human cells (THP-1 cells, dif
73 ate change may have serious implications for earthworm communities and for the functions they provide
74 ect sizes of associations between introduced earthworm communities and plant diversity, cover of plan
75      We compiled a global dataset of sampled earthworm communities from 6928 sites in 57 countries as
76 s were found to be more important in shaping earthworm communities than soil properties or habitat co
77                         We identified a core earthworm community comprising Proteobacteria ( approxim
78 this reflects the phylogenetic uniqueness of earthworms compared to the well-annotated model animals.
79 evaluated against a data set of 402 internal earthworm concentrations reported from the literature in
80      Nanoplastics were detected in depurated earthworms confirming their uptake without any detectabl
81 specially notable in the global South, where earthworms contribute 10% of total grain production in S
82                   Our findings indicate that earthworms contribute to roughly 6.5% of global grain (m
83                                          The earthworm contribution is especially notable in the glob
84 ses or control cauterization with artificial earthworms covered with earthworm wash (EWW) or distille
85 revealed that detrimental warming effects on earthworm densities and biomass could indeed be partly e
86 effects depends on presence of crop residue, earthworm density and type and rate of fertilization.
87 ults indicate that PFAA bioaccumulation into earthworms depends on soil concentrations, soil characte
88 oluminescent systems (those of limpet Latia, earthworms Diplocardia and Fridericia and higher fungi),
89 ntries as a basis for predicting patterns in earthworm diversity, abundance, and biomass.
90 nin, a pore-forming toxin extracted from the earthworm E. fetida, inserts large conductance nanopores
91 by polyoxymethylene (POM) passive uptake and earthworm (E. fetida) biouptake.
92 lined with increasing richness of introduced earthworm ecological groups.
93                          Focused on the soil-earthworm ecosystem, we for the first time deciphered th
94 cal disturbances should encourage beneficial earthworm effects and support multiple ecosystem service
95  both exotic earthworms and N addition, such earthworm effects on the nematode community were negated
96 ed weekly throughout the life history of the earthworm Eisenia andrei to test the hypothesis that the
97 nin, a sphingomyelin-specific toxin from the earthworm Eisenia fetida [10, 11].
98       Lysenin from the coelomic fluid of the earthworm Eisenia fetida belongs to the aerolysin family
99 ular and cellular toxicity mechanisms in the earthworm Eisenia fetida exposed to AgNPs (83 +/- 22 nm)
100                                          The earthworm Eisenia fetida is one of the most used species
101 oparticle recognition by coelomocytes of the earthworm Eisenia fetida using E. fetida coelomic protei
102  that such dual strokes occur as well in the earthworm Eisenia fetida which inhabits moist sediments
103 initro-1,3,5-triazacyclohexane (RDX), in the earthworm Eisenia fetida.
104                              We thus exposed earthworms ( Eisenia fetida ) to artificial soil amended
105  investigate arsenic (As) bioaccumulation in earthworms (Eisenia andrei) exposed to six field-collect
106 , 1, 3, 6, and 12 months of soil incubation, earthworms (Eisenia andrei) were introduced for 72 h exp
107 re compared to actual PAH bioaccumulation in earthworms (Eisenia fetida) and rye grass (Lolium multif
108 ccumulation factors (BSAFs) were assessed in earthworms (Eisenia fetida) exposed to soil microcosms a
109                           Uptake of PFAAs by earthworms (Eisenia fetida) exposed to unspiked soils wi
110                                              Earthworms (Eisenia fetida) were exposed to Au NPs in ar
111 erns, and biomagnification of PFASs in soil, earthworms (Eisenia fetida), and Bank voles (Myodes glar
112 copolymers were assessed in laboratory-grown earthworms (Eisenia fetida, triplicate of exposure tests
113     Lysenin is a pore-forming toxin from the earthworm Eisenida foetida, of which both the soluble an
114                                Specifically, earthworms enhanced multifunctionality by shifting the f
115 od for maintaining the prostate gland of the earthworm, Eudrilus eugeniae ex vivo and examine its pot
116 for estimating pesticide bioconcentration in earthworms exhibit limited applicability across differen
117  extracts of E. fetida tissue suggested that earthworms exhibited significant changes in their metabo
118              Individual Lumbricus terrestris earthworms exposed for 28 days in mesocosms of 260 g moi
119                                           In earthworms exposed to Ansulite and Arctic Foam aqueous f
120                                              Earthworms exposed to lyocell had a marginal growth redu
121 ully identified CMTT particles in laboratory earthworms exposed to soil spiked with CMTT.
122         Two metabolites were detected in the earthworms exposed to the C4-FASA-based copolymer: perfl
123 tperformed existing models in characterizing earthworm exposure to pesticides in soil, but it could a
124 dings support the hypothesis that introduced earthworms facilitate particular plant species adapted t
125 oxicological effect of microcystins (MCs) on earthworms, filter paper acute toxicity test, avoidance
126       The reduction efficiencies measured by earthworm for coconut AC and corn stover biochar were ge
127 vel luciferin from a bioluminescent Siberian earthworm Fridericia heliota was recently described.
128 CHEMHIST upon in situ imaging, we sampled an earthworm from its natural habitat and created an intera
129       This shows that drilodefensins protect earthworms from the harmful effects of ingested polyphen
130 20-induced neurotoxicity and the recovery of earthworms from transient neurotoxicity stress.
131 he probably continuous introduction of alien earthworms, from a variety of sources and introduction p
132 s at the cut ends of invertebrate myelinated earthworm giant axons beginning with the formation of a
133  structures, which form after transection of earthworm giant axons, are very dynamic in the short ter
134 ene, earthworm wash vapor, fish water vapor, earthworms, goldfish) but not water vapor.
135  insights into the variations of ARGs in the earthworm gut and highlight the vital role of viruses in
136  the geographic patterns and main drivers of earthworm gut ARGs remain largely unknown.
137 ve disruption of microbiome and resistome in earthworm gut by chiral fungicides and offer significant
138 act the inhibitory effects of polyphenols on earthworm gut enzymes, and high-polyphenol diets increas
139                                          The earthworm gut had a lower frequency of co-occurrence pat
140 il solution (0.01 M CaCl2), but in synthetic earthworm guts desorption was higher from microplastics
141                                              Earthworm guts harbored a lower diversity and abundance
142                                              Earthworms have been perceived as benevolent soil engine
143 ibility of maintaining the prostate gland of earthworms in an ex vivo setting, providing a valuable m
144 sment underlined a moderate to high risk for earthworms in arable soils mostly attributed to insectic
145 t at two sites in Minnesota, USA by sampling earthworms in closed and open canopy in three temperatur
146 e FASA-based copolymers were taken up by the earthworms in concentrations between 19 and 33 ng/g of d
147  suggest that warming limits the invasion of earthworms in northern North America by causing less fav
148  and offspring generations of two species of earthworms in order to evaluate possible mechanisms of a
149 ercial mycorrhization with truffles, and how earthworms in the inoculation substrate would affect the
150                                              Earthworms inhabiting highly contaminated soils bare clo
151                            It is unclear how earthworms interact with soil management practices, maki
152 et al. () explored how N addition and exotic earthworms interacted to impact on the plant-feeding nem
153 (particularly the plasmid-borne ARGs) in the earthworm intestinal microbiome.
154 species adapted to the abiotic conditions of earthworm-invaded forests.
155 t region that to date supposedly have slowed earthworm invasion, future warming is hypothesized to ac
156 ies richness or evenness did not change with earthworm invasion, our results indicate clear changes i
157 future warming is hypothesized to accelerate earthworm invasions into yet non-invaded regions.
158 e and soil macro-organism (RQs > 1), but for earthworms it was safe (RQs < 1).
159 een the uptake of the two forms of Zn by the earthworm L. rubellus, with the dietary pathway accounti
160                                              Earthworm-like crawlers realize locomotion through in-pl
161 this obstacle can be removed by our proposed earthworm-like peristaltic crawling motion mechanism, ba
162  robotic control problems by a case study of earthworm-like peristaltic crawling without traditional
163  d.w.), and higher concentrations of PFAS in earthworms living in sludge-amended soil compared to non
164 , uptake pathways by, and biokinetics in the earthworm Lumbricus rubellus were investigated using sta
165 , we studied the survival and fitness of the earthworm Lumbricus terrestris (Oligochaeta, Lumbricidae
166          The extracellular hemoglobin of the earthworm Lumbricus terrestris has four major kinds of O
167 hexagonal bilayer hemoglobin (HBL Hb) of the earthworm Lumbricus terrestris provided masses of 3.41 t
168                 Many annelids, including the earthworm Lumbricus terrestris, have giant cooperative r
169 er hemoglobin (Hb) and its subunits from the earthworm Lumbricus terrestris.
170 astics in microcosms with the deep-burrowing earthworm Lumbricus terrestris.
171 ability models for predicting Cu toxicity to earthworms (Lumbricus rubellus, Aporrectodea longa, and
172 trate here the formation of PFOA and PFOS in earthworms (Lumbricus terrestris) from a group of four z
173 b encompassing land-applied biosolids, soil, earthworms (Lumbricus), deer mice (Peromyscus maniculatu
174                           Populations of the earthworm, Lumbricus rubellus, are commonly found across
175     The extracellular hemoglobin (Hb) of the earthworm, Lumbricus terrestris, has four major O2-bindi
176 tion of exposure, and that accumulation into earthworms may be a potential route of entry of PFAAs in
177 ts indicated that the conduction velocity of earthworm medial giant nerve fiber decreased significant
178                                     However, earthworm-mediated changes in soil physical structure, p
179                                 The observed earthworm metabolic changes appeared to be consistent wi
180                                  Finally, an earthworm metallothionein-GFP construct could be activat
181 higher on the experimental site in the soil, earthworms, mice (livers), and European starling eggs, b
182 s implications to its functional role in the earthworm microbiome.
183 o be integrated with models that account for earthworm movement and fluctuating soil pesticide concen
184 in vivo procedures that permanently maintain earthworm myelinated medial giant axons whose functional
185 cterizing the major metal-binding protein in earthworms, namely the two isoforms of metallothionein.
186 een the 2 arms of a maze containing airborne earthworm odor as compared with a blank control.
187                  Preoperatively, exposure to earthworm odor produced more frequent and shorter durati
188  snakes exhibited differential responding to earthworm odors.
189  inoculation, and general negative effect of earthworm on branching density.
190  the multiple direct and indirect impacts of earthworms on ecosystem functions within an ecological m
191                   We estimate the impacts of earthworms on global production of key crops by analyzin
192                                The effect of earthworms on mycorrhization of silver fir with Tuber ae
193 for the first time the impacts of introduced earthworms on plant diversity and community composition
194 earch has ignited debate about the effect of earthworms on the GHG balance of soil.
195  aquatic (snail and mussel) and terrestrial (earthworm) organisms and for monitoring the environmenta
196 n soil water content (SWC) can also decrease earthworm performance.
197 at inactivated coelomic fluid (HI-CF) of the earthworm, Perionyx excavatus as a potential alternative
198 burrowing horizontally to acquire nutrients) earthworm Pontoscolex corethrurus that was added to the
199 cide glyphosate did not significantly affect earthworm population responses to RT.
200                                              Earthworm population responses were more pronounced when
201 ecological policies and practices to support earthworm populations and overall soil biodiversity coul
202 ultivation practices is expected to increase earthworm populations and their contributions to ecosyst
203 orted on the effects of tillage intensity on earthworm populations, attributed in narrative reviews t
204                           Here, we show that earthworms possess a class of unique surface-active meta
205 s that favor growth-promoting rhizobacteria, earthworms, predatory mites, and other beneficial organi
206                 They demonstrate that exotic earthworm presence alone increased the abundance of less
207 escribing 21 ecosystem functions showed that earthworm presence generally enhanced multifunctionality
208 e show, using meta-analysis, that on average earthworm presence in agroecosystems leads to a 25% incr
209  show, in a unique two-year experiment, that earthworm presence increases the combined cumulative emi
210                Yet, studies on the effect of earthworm presence on crop yields have not been quantita
211 elevated CO2 , nutrient enrichment, drought, earthworm presence, or warming) were manipulated.
212            Because NT agriculture stimulates earthworm presence, our results identify a possible biol
213                                  Here we use earthworm primary cells, cross-referencing to human cell
214               We successfully maintained the earthworm prostate gland in cell culture media for over
215  weights were correlated to % weight loss in earthworm (r = -0.568, P = 0.028).
216 ed to examine the response of Eisenia fetida earthworms raised from juveniles for 20-23 weeks in soil
217                                              Earthworms reside in the most contaminated sites on eart
218 olomics provides a more sensitive measure of earthworm response to TiO(2) materials in soil and that
219               Mycorrhization with or without earthworms revealed contrasting effects on fine root bio
220  to determine total As within both the whole earthworm's body (AsE) and coelomic fluid extracts (AsF)
221                       Here, we show that the earthworm's metal detoxification pathway can be exploite
222 two phyla (a waterbird, freshwater fish, and earthworms) sampled in different geographical areas and
223               The protein ES20, derived from earthworm shock secretion, is a vomeronasally mediated c
224        The accumulation of labeled Zn by the earthworms showed a direct relationship with the proport
225 city was found in the filter paper test, and earthworms showed no avoidance response to MCs exposure.
226                             Digestion of the earthworms showed that they did not retain microplastics
227 m uptake and elimination studies using three earthworm species (Lumbricus terrestris, Aporrectodea ca
228                     The invasion of European earthworm species across northern North America has seve
229 sts) on the springtail Folsomia candida, the earthworm species Aporectodea caliginosa and Eisenia fet
230 of Zn and Pb in thin sections of two epigeic earthworm species collected from a Pb/Zn-mine soil.
231 ilot-scale vermireactor for 91 days with the earthworm species Eisenia andrei.
232                        We show that 70 alien earthworm species have colonized the North American cont
233 lating the developed toxicity models for one earthworm species to another species.
234  the neonicotinoid imidacloprid between five earthworm species, a critical nontarget taxon.
235 farm and regional levels by sampling plants, earthworms, spiders and bees in 1470 fields of 205 rando
236                           This suggests that earthworms stimulate plant growth predominantly through
237 tic relationships, with the exception of the earthworm, suggesting that the reported presence of J ch
238 ts the Open Air Laboratories (OPAL) Soil and Earthworm Survey as an example of public participation i
239                     In addition to the known earthworm symbiont (Verminephrobacter sp.), we identifie
240 diclofenac, fluoxetine, and orlistat in soil-earthworm systems.
241 ed in Shao et al. (): (a) the endogeic (i.e. earthworms that typically live in the soil, burrowing ho
242                            It is unknown how earthworms, the major component of animal biomass in man
243                                              Earthworms thus repeatedly ingested and excreted nanopla
244  Detection and quantification of (68)Zn-E in earthworm tissue was possible after only 4 h of dermal e
245          Analyses of soils, pore waters, and earthworm tissues using multiple collector inductively c
246              The relative sensitivity of the earthworms to Cu in different soils followed the same or
247  the arsenious soils, the As distribution in earthworms was examined by micro-X-ray fluorescence spec
248 tion with artificial earthworms covered with earthworm wash (EWW) or distilled water.
249 f airborne odorants (amyl acetate, limonene, earthworm wash vapor, fish water vapor, earthworms, gold
250  mites), and soil biota (including mites and earthworms), we assess the impacts of synergistic intera
251   BDE-209 burdens in sludge-amended soil and earthworms were 7500 +/- 2800 mug/kg TOC and 6500 +/- 41
252 noculation, lower fine root tip density when earthworms were added, the specific root tip density inc
253                                              Earthworms were also collected in situ from a fire-equip
254 ta soil accumulation factors (BSAFs) for the earthworms were calculated after 28 days of exposure for
255       Residual zwitterionic/cationic PFAS in earthworms were detected at the end of the elimination p
256                                     Eighteen earthworms were exposed for 6 days to 0.2 mug/cm(2) of C
257        Standard wild-type Lumbricus rubellus earthworms were exposed to soil spiked with CdCl(2) and
258            The highest concentrations in the earthworms were for perfluorooctane sulfonate (PFOS) in
259                         Nine vehicle control earthworms were sacrificed at days 6 and 13, separately.
260 d, more importantly, the bigger-sized anecic earthworms were the most sensitive ecological groups to
261 e compositions of the soils, pore waters and earthworms were then determined using multiple collector
262 suggest that MCs induces oxidative stress on earthworms, which leads to disruption of the antioxidant
263  (BMF) > 1 was detected for Bank vole(whole)/earthworm(whole) for perfluorooctansulfonate in the skii
264 ues of ecologically significant taxa such as earthworms will improve risk assessments.
265   Uptake routes were isolated by introducing earthworms with sealed and unsealed mouthparts into test
266 rs generally predicted PAH concentrations in earthworms within a factor of 10, although correlations
267 il properties, and crop yields together with earthworm-yield responses from the literature.

 
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