The gardener's best friend, the earthworm, is great at protecting leaves from being
chomped1(格格地咬牙) by
slugs(蛞蝓), suggests research in BioMed Central's open access journal BMC Ecology. Although they
lurk2(潜伏) in the soil, they seem to protect the plants above ground. Increasing plant diversity also decreases the amount of damage slugs do to individual plants. Spanish slugs (Arion vulgaris) are among the top 100 worst alien species in Europe and are considered a pest almost everywhere. A team of scientists from the University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences Vienna investigated what effect the presence of earthworms and plant diversity would have on the amount of damage these slugs caused.
Using large incubators to simulate
grassland3 environments the researchers could regulate the diversity of plant species and time the introduction of earthworms and slugs. They found that the presence of worms increased nitrogen content of plants and reduced the number of leaves damaged due to slugs by 60%. Yet when they compared leaf area damaged the researchers found slugs also ate 40% less at high plant diversity than at low.
Explaining their results Dr Johann Zaller, who led the study, said, "Our results suggest that two processes might be going on. Firstly, earthworms improved the plant's ability to protect itself against slugs perhaps through the build-up of nitrogen-containing
toxic4 compounds.
Secondly5, even though these slugs are generalists they prefer widely available food and in high diverse
ecosystems7 slugs eat less in total because they have to switch their diets more often since plants of the same species are less available. Therefore gardeners are to help protect earthworms by increasing plant diversity in the garden in order to keep slug damage low. In order to
elucidate8(阐明) the
mechanisms9 behind these complex interactions, all parts of an
ecosystem6 need to be investigated."