Earthworm, suborder Crassiclitellata, cohort Terrimegadrili (Jamieson, 1988)

Like insects, earthworms are among the animals most frequently encountered by many Floridians. Our kids play with them, dissect them in middle school biology, we fish with them, they crawl across our sidewalks and live in our flowerpots. Despite this, their ecological and economic importance often g...

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Main Author: William T. Crow
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The University of Florida George A. Smathers Libraries 2012-09-01
Series:EDIS
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Online Access:https://journals.flvc.org/edis/article/view/120119
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author William T. Crow
author_facet William T. Crow
author_sort William T. Crow
collection DOAJ
description Like insects, earthworms are among the animals most frequently encountered by many Floridians. Our kids play with them, dissect them in middle school biology, we fish with them, they crawl across our sidewalks and live in our flowerpots. Despite this, their ecological and economic importance often goes unrecognized. Earthworms have several important ecological roles. Additionally, some species are used commercially for bait, animal feed, environmental remediation, and composting. This 6-page fact sheet was written by William T. Crow and published by the UF Department of Entomology and Nematology, September 2012. EENY-532/IN946: Earthworm, suborder Crassiclitellata, cohort Terrimegadrili (Jamieson 1988) (ufl.edu)
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spelling doaj-art-3c38aae5bb5644d3a1cb1e34087f79d82025-02-08T06:05:39ZengThe University of Florida George A. Smathers LibrariesEDIS2576-00092012-09-0120129Earthworm, suborder Crassiclitellata, cohort Terrimegadrili (Jamieson, 1988)William T. Crow0University of FloridaLike insects, earthworms are among the animals most frequently encountered by many Floridians. Our kids play with them, dissect them in middle school biology, we fish with them, they crawl across our sidewalks and live in our flowerpots. Despite this, their ecological and economic importance often goes unrecognized. Earthworms have several important ecological roles. Additionally, some species are used commercially for bait, animal feed, environmental remediation, and composting. This 6-page fact sheet was written by William T. Crow and published by the UF Department of Entomology and Nematology, September 2012. EENY-532/IN946: Earthworm, suborder Crassiclitellata, cohort Terrimegadrili (Jamieson 1988) (ufl.edu) https://journals.flvc.org/edis/article/view/120119IN946
spellingShingle William T. Crow
Earthworm, suborder Crassiclitellata, cohort Terrimegadrili (Jamieson, 1988)
EDIS
IN946
title Earthworm, suborder Crassiclitellata, cohort Terrimegadrili (Jamieson, 1988)
title_full Earthworm, suborder Crassiclitellata, cohort Terrimegadrili (Jamieson, 1988)
title_fullStr Earthworm, suborder Crassiclitellata, cohort Terrimegadrili (Jamieson, 1988)
title_full_unstemmed Earthworm, suborder Crassiclitellata, cohort Terrimegadrili (Jamieson, 1988)
title_short Earthworm, suborder Crassiclitellata, cohort Terrimegadrili (Jamieson, 1988)
title_sort earthworm suborder crassiclitellata cohort terrimegadrili jamieson 1988
topic IN946
url https://journals.flvc.org/edis/article/view/120119
work_keys_str_mv AT williamtcrow earthwormsubordercrassiclitellatacohortterrimegadrilijamieson1988