
WORM WRANGLERSVIDEO | Gary and Audrey Revell demonstrate worm grunting to collect bait in the Apalachicola National Forest in Florida's panhandle. A second segment shows a preliminary test for earthworm responses to a burrowing mole. The container holds soil and 50 earthworms, which start coming out of the soil as the mole burrows into it. (Video is sped-up).Catania et al. / PLoS One It’s a pole, but it sounds like a mole.
That’s the conclusion of the first scientific study of the
old art called worm grunting. In the southeastern United States, bait collectors hunt
earthworms by rubbing a piece of iron across a stake in the ground, a technique
that creates vibrations that sound like grunting noises. The serenade brings earthworms
to the surface, where collectors grab them.
Those grunting vibrations probably trigger the worms’ urge
to flee from moles, says Kenneth Catania of Vanderbilt
University in Nashville, Tenn.
An alternative explanation, that grunting mimics the patter of rain, doesn’t
fit his evidence, he reported online October 13 in PLoS ONE.

GRUNTINGAt the 2008 Sopchoppy Worm Gruntin' Festival in Florida, expert Gary Revell demonstrates the traditional art of hunting worms by rubbing metal over a wooden stake in the ground. The technique makes a grunting noise reminiscent of a predatory mole.The worms rush out of the ground.Catania
A worm grunter could
be a new example of what theorists call a rare enemy, a classic twist in
predator-prey dynamics, Catania
says. Moles can eat a lot of earthworms so he’s not surprised that worms have
evolved an urge to rush out of the ground
at the first twang of any, even remotely mole-like vibration.

DREADED MOLEThe eastern American mole readily eats Florida's plump native earthworms when given a chance. Catania
Compared to moles, though, people haven’t played such an
important role in earthworm evolutionary history. Thus they count as rare
enemies. Their habits don’t have the punch of the big mole menace, and people
can easily exploit worms’ defensive reactions — such as fleeing vibrations, the
reaction that works against the more important predator.
Catania started his quest to
understand worm grunting by visiting the 2008 Sopchoppy Worm Gruntin’ Festival in
Florida. There,
expert practitioners Gary and Audrey Revell, who run a local bait shop, wowed Catania with their speed
at catching the hefty Diplocardia mississippiensis
earthworms.
These earthworms are native to the region, as is the eastern
American mole, Scalopus aquaticus. Home
to two long-time antagonists, the locale seemed the place for testing ideas
about how worm grunting works, Catania
says.

LOVELY WORMDiplocardia mississippiensis, the main earthworm in Florida’s Apalachicola National Forest, can grow to roughly the size of a foot-long pencil. People search out the species for bait, mimicking sounds created by moles hunting the worms for food.Catania
In his 1881 treatise on “vegetable mould” and worms, Darwin had suggested that when
the ground trembles, earthworms flee as if from a mole. He’d tried pounding on the ground but got no
reaction from worms, possibly, he wrote, because he wasn’t doing it right.
Catania followed the Revells
around the Apalachicola
National Forest, where a
permit allows them to collect the worms. Moles abound there and have a taste
for the worm species: A mole in Catania’s lab
ate its weight in Florida
worms day after day.
When the Revells started grunting, worms burst to the ground
at top speed, about 50 centimeters per minute, but then slowed down. “They kind
of come out running,” Catania
says, as if in mad flight from danger.
To see if moles evoked the same flight, Catania observed worms in buckets of soil and
in his soil-filled worm enclosures. When he released a mole onto the soil
surface, the mole burrowed down and worms crawled up. Surfacing earthworms
headed in just about every direction except toward the mole. In the enclosures,
broadcasting a recording of a digging mole produced the same response.
Worms also crawl above ground after a rain, so Catania drenched his enclosures
with a sprinkler. And for a more natural effect, he waited for big
thunderstorms to see if pounding raindrops prompted worms to surface. “I was
out there in the rain with a flashlight,” he says. In both cases, a few worms
eventually surfaced, but nothing like the numbers boiling up from a mole.
Catania’s evidence provides
some support for the mole hypothesis, agrees Jayne Yack of Carleton University
in Ottawa, Canada. She and her colleagues
published a paper online October 14 in Biology
Letters documenting the success of grunting in bringing earthworms out of
the soil.
Among the new questions, she says, is why some of the other known
species of earthworms, such as the common night crawler, don’t appear to
respond to grunting even though they contend with burrowing predators.
Still, Darwin’s
hunch about moles is looking good. And maybe he would have been soothed to hear Catania say that grunting actually
is tricky to learn.
Found in: Life
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