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Other
body colours
Aporrectodea icteria Common Name:
Mottled worm, Ver marbré Length: 55-135 mm |
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Habitat: This species has been found in garden soil,
meadows, and orchards.
Canadian Distribution: Ontario
Interesting Facts and Features: This species has only
been found in two places in North America: Ontario and New York.
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Aporrectodea rosea Common Name:
Pink soil worm, Ver rose du sol Length: 25-85 m |
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Habitat: This species is commonly found in fields, gardens,
pastures, forests, and under leaves and stones. It has also been
spotted along the shores of rivers and lakes.
Canadian Distribution: Alberta, British Columbia, Labrador,
New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Ontario, Prince Edward Island, and
Quebec
Interesting Facts and Features: This species has a
unique flared clitellum, a pink head and a gray body. |
Aporrectodea trapezoides Common
Name: Southern worm, Ver méridional Length: 80-140
mm |
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Habitat: This species is commonly found in the soil around
the roots of potted plants, in gardens, cultivated fields, forests,
soils of various types, on the banks of streams, and occasionally
in sandy soils.
Canadian Distribution: Alberta, British Columbia, Manitoba
New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Ontario, Prince Edward Island, and
Quebec
Interesting Facts and Features: This earthworm is
reasonably drought tolerant. |
Aporrectodea tuberculata Common
Name: Canadian worm, Ver canadien Length: 90-150
mm |
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Habitat: This species is widely distributed in most habitats.
It has been found in wet areas near streams and springs where
there was a large concentration of organic matter. Other sightings
include under logs, compost, peat, rocks, ditches, turf, and occasionally
in manure.
Canadian Distribution: Alberta, British Columbia, Manitoba,
New Brunswick, Newfoundland, Nova Scotia, Ontario, Prince Edward
Island, Quebec, and Saskatchewan.
Interesting Facts and Features: This species is very
common in Canada. |
Aporrectodea turgida Common Name:
Pasture worm, Ver du pâturage Length: 60-85 mm |
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Habitat: This species has a broad range of habitats,
including gardens, fields, turf, leaf litter in forests, compost,
banks of spring sand streams, wasteland, city dumps, and streams.
It is commonly found in irrigated areas.
Canadian Distribution: Alberta, British Columbia, New
Brunswick, Newfoundland, Nova Scotia, Ontario, Prince Edward
Island, Quebec, and Saskatchewan |
Octolasion cyaneum Common Name:
Woodland blue worm, Ver bleu des bois Length: 65-180
mm |
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Habitat: This species has been found under stones, in
water, in moss, stream banks, ploughed fields, wet sand and forest
soil. This species is also commonly found under logs and rocks
near streambeds.
Canadian Distribution: Alberta, British Columbia, New
Brunswick, Newfoundland, Nova Scotia, Ontario, Quebec, Saskatchewan
Interesting Fact and Features: This species is relatively
rare in North America, and it can be recognized by its bluish
hue. |
Octolasion tyrtaeum Common Name:
Woodland white worm, Ver blanc des bois Length: 25-130
mm |
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Habitat: This species is commonly found under stones,
logs, peat, leaf mold, compost, forest litter, gardens, cultivated
fields, pastures, stream banks, in springs, and around the roots
of submerged vegetation.
Canadian Distribution: Alberta, British Columbia, Manitoba,
Nova Scotia, Ontario, and Quebec
Interesting Facts and Features: This earthworm can
be recognized by its snub nose, light colour (almost gray),
and the long distance between the clitellum and the nose (>
2 cm). |
Sparganophilus eiseni Common
Name: American mud worm, Ver américain de la vase Length:
150-200 mm |
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Habitat: This species is often found living in muddy
areas. Examples of such locations include the muddy banks of streams,
rivers, ponds, and lakes.
Canadian Distribution: Ontario Interesting Facts and
Features: This is one of the longest earthworms in Canada, and
its clitellum is located unusually close to its nose (<1
cm). |
Earthworms NOT found
in the key
Aporrectodea bowcrowensis Common
Name: none Length: 17-60 mm |
| Habitat: This species has only been found in
an unglaciated area of the Porcupine Hills in Alberta.
Canadian Distribution: Alberta
Physical Description: This earthworm has an epilobic
prostomium, it has no colour (not white, green, or red), the
clitellum is not flared ventrally, and the tubercula pubertatis
are not in the form of small discs. The tubercula pubertatis
are located on segments 29-30. The clitellum is located on segments
25-32, and there are genital tumescence on one or more segments
in front of the clitellum.
Interesting Facts and Features: This earthworm species
is native to Canada. |
Arctiostrotus vancouverensis Common
Name: none Length: 167-381 mm |
| Habitat: This species has been found in soil
under western hemlock, silver fir, western red-cedar, salal, red
huckleberry, and deer fern. It has also been found in organic
material, onto and into old stumps.
Canadian Distribution: This species has only been found
in organic matter on Vancouver Island (British Columbia) and
in Washington state.
Physical Description: This earthworm has a tanylobic
prostomium, separate setae, is unpigmented when young but develops
an orange-brown flush over its entire body as an adult (especially
on the back of the head). The annular clitellum is located on
segments 13-18.
Interesting Facts and Features: This earthworm species
is characteristic of the forests of Vancouver Island. It plays
a significant role in the formation of humus (the layer of organic
matter at the top of a soil profile; habitat for most decomposers).
It was named after the location where it was found. |
Bimastos lawrenceae Common Name:
none Length: data not available |
| Habitat: This species has been found in a spruce-hemlock
forest, containing moist organic matter and matted vegetation
in wet situations. Examples of such environments include mosses
and matted vegetation in steep cold (4°C) streams, recent clearcuts,
muck of skunk-cabbage swamps, and under wet bark.
Canadian Distribution: Vancouver Island British Columbia
Physical Description: This earthworm has an epilobic
prostomium, and its saddle-shaped clitellum is located on segments
25-34. The dorsal side of this species is a pale red colour,
while the ventral side (stomach) is transparent. The setae are
closely paired. This species was named after the original collector.
To date, only five specimens have been studied.
Interesting Facts and Features: Only a few were found
on Vancouver Island (near Port Alberni). The presence of Bimastos
lawrenceae at this location may provide evidence for a preglacial
distribution of Bimastos across Canadian North America, meaning
this species of earthworm was able to survive the ice age. |
Eisenia hortensis Common Name:
none Length: data not available |
| Habitat: This species has been found in the
United States of America in cultivated soil, gardens, pastures,
woodlands, and is abundant in soils bordering rivers and lakes.
It has also been sighted in botanical gardens, lawns, peat bog,
compost, and under manure.
Canadian Distribution: open pasture in Peace River
Alberta
Physical Description: This earthworm has an epilobic
prostomium, a male pore on segment 15, widely paired setae,
and has a red to reddish-brown colour on its back. There are
also colourless areas on the sides of segment 11. The clitellum
is located on segments 26, 27, 28-32, 33, 34. The tubercula
pubertatis are found on segments 30-31. |
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