Dew-worms in white nights: High-latitude light constrains earthworm (Lumbricus terrestris) behaviour at the soil surface
Highlights
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- We studied how the light during boreal summer nights limits dew-worm activity on the soil surface.
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- Compared with a darkened treatment, soil surface activity was halved in ambient light.
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- Mating frequency was consequently also reduced.
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- Response to light differed, although not consistently, in dew-worms from different latitudes.
Abstract
Soil
is an effective barrier to light penetration that limits the direct
influence of light on belowground organisms. Variation in aboveground
light conditions, however, is important to soil-dwelling animals that
are periodically active on the soil surface. A prime example is the
earthworm Lumbricus terrestris L. (the dew-worm), an ecosystem
engineer that emerges nocturnally on the soil surface. In the summer,
the northernmost populations of L. terrestris are exposed to a
time interval with no daily dark period. During a two-week period
preceding the summer solstice, we studied the constraints that boreal
night illumination imposes on L. terrestris surface activity by
comparing their behaviour under ambient light with artificially-induced
darkness. Looking for evidence of geographical divergence in light
response, we compared the behaviour of native L. terrestris
(Jokioinen, S–W Finland; 60°48′N) with two markedly more southern
populations, from Preston (Lancashire, UK; 53°47′N) and Coshocton (Ohio,
USA; 40°22′N) where the nights have a period of darkness throughout the
year (total latitudinal range ca. 2300 km). Under ambient light
conditions, L. terrestris emergence on the soil surface was
diminished by half compared with the darkened treatment and it peaked at
the darkest period of the night. Also mating rate decreased
considerably under ambient light. The native dew-worms were generally
the most active under ambient light. They emerged earlier in the evening
and ceased their activity later in the morning than dew-worms from the
two more southerly populations. The differences in behaviour were,
however, significant mainly between native and UK dew-worms. In the
darkened treatment, the behaviour of the three earthworm origins did not
differ. Under the experimental conditions light condition was the
dominant environmental factor controlling surface activity, but elevated
night-time air temperature and humidity also encouraged dew-worm
emergence without discernible differences among geographical origins.
Our results show, that in boreal summer, the high level of night
illumination strongly limits soil-surface activity of dew-worms.
Considering the important regulatory role of L. terrestris in
many ecosystem processes, this can have significant corollaries in
dew-worm impacts on the environment. Although evidence for geographical
differentiation in behaviour was obtained, the results point to
phenotypic flexibility in L. terrestris light response.
Keywords
- Adaptation;
- Geographical variation;
- Illumination;
- Light environment;
- Phenotypic flexibility;
- Sensory ecology
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