• mozz@mbin.grits.devOP
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    6 months ago

    IDK why I caused such a fighting

    The article and what I said is 100% accurate about the northern US and most of Canada

    It’s not accurate as to the southern US or North American in general. Wherever the glaciers came they killed the earthworms, and for the most part they didn’t bounce back (for reasons that to me are not clear) until the Europeans brought European worms, but outside of glacier reach everything was fine and earthworms and forests have both been happy.

    Citation is OP article + Smithsonian link + Wikipedia link posted elsewhere; they all say more or less the same thing

      • mozz@mbin.grits.devOP
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        6 months ago

        Crazy worms are real; it’s a whole different issue of invasive species as opposed to the issue of normal earthworms being above 45 degrees latitude in the first place.

        I still think that the whole issue with crazy worms is, more or less, that they can do the exact same damage the non crazy worms can do, just a little more effectively, and so it’s sort of a side issue as you were saying. I think there’s a certain confusion between “invasive worms” meaning one or the other. But IDK, I am not a worm expert, I just learned this stuff today.