2016
DOI: 10.1097/ss.0000000000000144
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Soil Animals and Pedogenesis

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Cited by 49 publications
(16 citation statements)
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“…Charles Darwin famously extolled the importance of earthworms as terrestrial ecosystem engineers, churning and aerating the soil with their burrows as well as burying and processing large fragments of organic matter and making their nutrients available to plants. Large-scale engineering by earthworms has recently been documented in South America [2] and may occur elsewhere. Even apart from their direct agricultural importance as soil processors, earthworms have a substantial economic impact—epigeic (leaf litter/compost-dwelling) species are used to process food waste (vermiculture), larger species are sold as bait for fish, and some earthworm species are considered delicacies and are sold for human consumption.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Charles Darwin famously extolled the importance of earthworms as terrestrial ecosystem engineers, churning and aerating the soil with their burrows as well as burying and processing large fragments of organic matter and making their nutrients available to plants. Large-scale engineering by earthworms has recently been documented in South America [2] and may occur elsewhere. Even apart from their direct agricultural importance as soil processors, earthworms have a substantial economic impact—epigeic (leaf litter/compost-dwelling) species are used to process food waste (vermiculture), larger species are sold as bait for fish, and some earthworm species are considered delicacies and are sold for human consumption.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The functional differences observed in biotic communities of ADEs also mean that these soils could provide different ecosystem services in the landscape. Higher earthworm populations and an improved soil structure mainly due to fauna-produced aggregates (as occurs in ADE) could positively affect primary productivity, litter decomposition and nutrient cycling 41 , pedogenetic processes 42 , and could help stabilize soil organic carbon in these soils 43 . These processes have been little studied, and merit further attention, both in forested and agriculturally managed ADE soils.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In addition to the plant growth, we also observed that small-red segmented worms, with diameters between 1 and 3 mm and lengths between 5 and 8 cm, were able to live/survive in the anode part of the MS100 Plant-MFC ( Figure 5). These worms, based on their physical appearance possibly from Annelida phylum [73], are natural decomposers which maintain soil fertility by altering soil compositions through decomposing and transforming organic matter [74]. The latter provides support that the bioanode does support (some) biodiversity.…”
Section: Mixture Of Activated Carbon (Ac) and Marine Sediment Effect mentioning
confidence: 99%