Research news on segmented worms

Segmented worms are a topic within invertebrate zoology encompassing organisms in the phylum Annelida, characterized by a metameric body plan in which serially repeated segments (metameres) contain reiterated organ systems, often separated internally by septa. This segmentation underlies specialized locomotion via segmentally arranged circular and longitudinal muscles acting against a fluid-filled coelom as a hydrostatic skeleton. Annelids exhibit a closed vascular system, well-developed nervous system with a ventral nerve cord and segmental ganglia, and diverse feeding and reproductive strategies. Research on segmented worms informs developmental patterning, regeneration, soil ecology, and comparative morphology of body plan evolution among bilaterian animals.

Life after death: How earthworms keep facilitating carbon capture

Earthworms don't stop shaping soil processes when they die. A new study shows they can still help store carbon in the soil, even after death. "This is quite surprising," says lead author Tullia Calogiuri. "Most of our knowledge ...