While global leaders fret about carbon taxes and redistribution of  wealth to developing countries, a new study suggests that not just  humans, but earthworms contribute to global warming in a significant  way, with populations set to boom in the next couple of decades.
 
In the new study, published in Nature Climate Change, researchers in Holland, the United  States and Colombia compiled the results of 237 separate experiments  from other published studies to explore earthworms’ role in global  greenhouse gas emissions, The Guardian reports.
The researchers  found that the presence of earthworms in soil increased  nitrous oxide emissions by 42 percent and carbon dioxide emissions by  33 percent, but since worms can produce one while reducing the other,  they found earthworms increased the global warming potential of soils by  16 percent overall.
“Earthworms play an essential part in determining the greenhouse-gas  balance of soils worldwide, and their influence is expected to grow over  the next decades,” the study reads. ” … Earthworm presence is likely to increase in  ecosystems worldwide. For example, large parts of North American forest  soils are now being invaded by earthworms for the first time since the  last glaciation.”
The growing use of organic fertilizers will  provide more food for earthworms, the study says, and will contribute to  the population increases. The increase in earthworms worldwide, in  turn, would most likely negatively affect the earth’s climate, but  habitat degradation and species invasions could help in population  control.
• Jessica Chasmar can be reached at jchasmar@washingtontimes.com.
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