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Show 60 HABITS OF WORMS. CHAP. II. a cylindrical burrow is necessarily much folded or crumpled. When another leaf is drawn in, this is done exteriorly to the first one, and so on with the succeeding leaves; and finally all become closely folded and pressed together. Sometimes the worm enlarges the mouth of its burrow, or makes a fresh one close by, so as to draw in a still larger number of leaves. They often or generally fill up the interstices between the drawn-in leaves with moist viscid earth ejected from their bodies; and thus the mouths of the burrows are securely plugged. Hundreds of such plugged burrows may be seen in many places, especia1ly during the autumnal and early winter months. But, as will hereafter be shown, leaves are dragged into the burrows not only for plugging thern up and for food, but for the sake of lining the upper part or mouth. When worms cannot obtain leaves, petioles, sticks, &c., with which to plug up the mouths of their burrows, they often protect them by little heaps of stones; and such heaps of smooth rounded pebbles may frequently be seen on gravel-walks. I-Iere there can be no CrrAP. II. PROTECTION OF TITEIR BURROWS. 61 question about food. A lady, who was interested in the habits of worms, removed the little heaps of stones from the mouths of several burrows and cleared the surface of the ground for some inches all round. She went out on the following night with· a lantern, and saw the worms with their tails fixed in their burrows, dragging the stones inwards by the aid of their mouths, no doubt by suction. '' After two nights some of the " holes had 8 or °v sma ll stones over "them; after four nights one had about "30, and another 34 stones."* One stone which had been dragged over the gravel-walk to the mouth of a burrow weighed two ounces ; and this proves how strong worms are. But they show greater strength in sometimes displacing stones in a well-trodden gravel-walk; that they do so, may be inferred from the cavities left by the displaced stones being exactly filled by those lying over the mouths of adjoining burrows, as I have myself observed. Work of this kind is usually performed "' An account of her observations is given in the' Gardeners' Chronicle,' March 28th, 1868, p. 324. |