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Earthworms form herds and make "group decisions"

(BBC) -- Earthworms form herds and make "group decisions", scientists have discovered.

 

The earthworms use touch to communicate and influence each other's behaviour, according to research published in the journal Ethology.

By doing so the worms collectively decide to travel in the same direction as part of a single herd.

The striking behaviour, found in the earthworm Eisenia fetida, is the first time that any type of worm, or annelid, has been shown to form active herds.

"Our results modify the current view that earthworms are animals lacking in social behaviour," says Ms Lara Zirbes, a PhD student at the University of Liege in Gembloux in Belgium.

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Comments  

 
0 #1 Alignment occurs as a reflective mechanismCees de Bruin 2010-05-27 12:06
The propensity in living organisms to align behaviour should not surprise us. As is demonstrated by Steven Strogatz (see video library for his video on: How things in nature tend to sync up).
We as humans would do it more naturally if we didn't think our way out of sense so habitually...
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