Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4392185 European Journal of Soil Biology 2009 5 Pages PDF
Abstract

Dendrobaena mrazeki is an endemic earthworm species inhabiting dry habitats such as pine and thermophilous oak forests in Central Europe. Metabolically, D. mrazeki showed some features typical for endogeic species and some of epigeic ones. In comparison with the related Dendrobaena octaedra, D. mrazeki was a larger earthworm with fresh body mass of adult and subadult individuals of W = 0.59 ± 0.05 g. Its body mass-specific oxygen consumption (M/W = 48 ± 5 μl O2 g−1 h−1, at 15 °C) was the lowest of all earthworms studied (Aporrectodea caliginosa, Aporrectodea rosea, D. octaedra, Lumbricus castaneus, Lumbricus rubellus and Octolasion lacteum), being strongly dependent on W (b from the equation M/W = aWb about −0.8). D. mrazeki had low relative water content (77.4% of fresh body mass) and small relative amount of dry weight of the intestinal content (20.1% of dry body mass), which is similar to the epigeic D. octaedra. The respiration rate of D. mrazeki remained the lowest even after recalculating M/W to respiration rate per dry mass or per dry mass without the intestine content to correct for the differences among species in body water content and gut content.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Soil Science
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