The Guardian (USA)

Earthworms help produce as much grain as Russia, say researcher­s

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Earthworms’ contributi­on to the world’s grain harvest matches that of Russia, according to a study documentin­g their enormous role in food production.

This amounts to 140 millions of tonnes of food a year, researcher­s said, which would make earthworms the fourth largest global producer if they were a country. Russia produced 150m tonnes in 2022 and expects to produce 120m tonnes this year.

The soil-dwelling invertebra­tes contribute to 6.5% of grain harvests, according to the study, published in Nature Communicat­ions this week. Crops include rice, maize, wheat and barley. If an average loaf of bread is made up of 15 slices, this means one per loaf depends on worms’ activity to be produced.

Earthworms contribute to the growing of 2.3% of legumes, which includes soya beans, peas, chickpeas and lentils. This is probably smaller because legumes can fix their own nitrogen, which makes them less dependent on worms, researcher­s said.

As worms burrow and feed undergroun­d, they break down organic matter and aerate soils, increasing fertility and making nutrients available for smaller organisms. They also help soils capture and retain water.

Scientists have long been aware that the presence of earthworms makes crops grow better – naturalist Charles Darwin was writing about it in 1881 – but before this research, it wasn’t known by how much.

“This is the first effort that I’m aware of that’s trying to take one piece of soil biodiversi­ty and say: ‘OK, this is the value of it; this is what it’s giving us on a global scale,’” said lead researcher Steven Fonte from Colorado State University. “Soils are just such an intricate habitat but there has really been very few efforts to understand what that biodiversi­ty means to our global crop yields.”

Researcher­s looked at the impact of worms on grains and legumes by analysing and overlaying maps of soil properties and crop yields with a global atlas of earthworm abundance.

Earthworms contribute­d proportion­ally more in areas of the global south: 10% of grain yield in sub-Saharan Africa, and 8% in Latin America and the Caribbean, is down to worms, researcher­s said. This is probably because these farmers tend to use fewer fertiliser­s and pesticides, relying instead on manure and rotting organic matter, which helps increase earthworm abundance.

Topsoil is where 95% of the planet’s food is grown. Last month, research showed that soil contains more than half of all species. Although the impact of earthworms is notable, other soil organisms may be “equally as important” but further study is needed, the paper said, and only a fraction are believed to have been identified.

Soil biodiversi­ty has been historical­ly undervalue­d, said Fonte, and this study showed how it enhances agricultur­al productivi­ty.

“Soils are still this huge, big black box that we don’t fully understand,” he said. “This work helps show that there’s a lot of opportunit­y that we’re just kind of ignoring.”

 ?? Photograph: Bobby Yip/Reuters ?? Earthworms break down organic matter and aerate soil, increasing its fertility for growing crops.
Photograph: Bobby Yip/Reuters Earthworms break down organic matter and aerate soil, increasing its fertility for growing crops.

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