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Redworm (Eisenia fetida)

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Springtail on a Redworm!
Redworms Eisenia fetida Scientific Classification: Class: Oligochaeta; Order: Haplotaxidae; Suborder: Lumbricina; Superfamily: Lumbricoidea; Family: Lumbricidae; Species: Eisenia; Subspecies: fetida
Common names for the Eisenia fetida are: Redworm, Red Wiggler, Tiger Worm, Manure Worm, Stink Worm, Fish Worm, Dung Worm, Fecal Worm, Striped Worm, as well as many other names. Eisenia fetida are recognized by their alternating red and buff stripes, thus the common name "Tiger Worm".
The Eisenia fetida is an Epigeic worm. Epigeic worms live on the surface of the soil or in the top 10 inches or so of the topsoil under the litter layer.
Worms such as the common night crawler (L. terrestris, also called the bait worm and dew worm) are Anecic worms. Anecic species build permanent, deep, vertical burrows in cool soils and feed in decaying organic matter and are difficult to raise domestically.
Earthworms are hermaphrodites, meaning they possess both male and female reproductive organs. Sexually mature Eisenia fetida have a swollen area approx. one-third of the distance between the head and the tail called the clitellum.
More information from the University of Wisconsin - La Crosse: Worm Anatomy Zoology Lab nightcrawler segmentation and nightcrawler organs (labeled). (PDF format will open in new window.)
When worms mate they lay side by side with their heads pointed in opposite directions and secrete a mucous that "seals" their bodies together. They then exchange sperm which is deposited on the surface of the skin and then moves to a pore a few segments above the clitellum where it is temporarily stored. Each worm also excretes its own eggs into pores on its skin surface not far from the sperm pore. Once sperm is exchanged, the worms move apart and secrete another thick mucous around their clitellum, which then dries to form a hardened band encircling its body. Once formed, the worm backs out of this mucous band sliding it from its body like a ring being slipped from your finger. As the band passes over the pores holding sperm and egg they are picked up on the sticky underside. Once the worm backs completely out of the mucous band the ends close, forming a tough little cocoon with sperm and egg inside. Fertilization takes place inside this cocoon. The worms will continue to produce cocoons until the sperm they received from their mate is completely used up.
The average incubation period for E. fetida is between 32 and 73 days. Newly hatched worms take about 8 to 10 weeks to sexually mature and begin producing cocoons. Once it breeds and starts laying cocoons, it can lay two to three cocoons per week for 6 months to a year. All of this is dependant upon the environment, i.e. moisture, temperature, available food, etc.
Optimum temperature for Eisenia fetida is 68° to 77° F (20° to 25° C). They can tolerate temperatures from 40° to 80° F (4° to 27° C). They become stressed at 85° F and can die quickly when temperatures reach above 90° F.
Taxonomist identification characteristics
External Structures of Eisenia fetida:
Eisenia fetida length 35-130mm (generally >70mm); diameter 3-5mm; segments 80-120; first dorsal pore between segments 4/5 (sometimes 5/6); clitellum over segments 24,25, 26-32; tubercula pubertatis on segments 28-30; seminal vesicles, four pairs on in 9-12; spermathecae, two pairs in 9/10 and 10/11. ("Earthworms of Ontario" by John Reynolds)
Further Reading
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