This digital document is a journal article from Applied Soil Ecology, published by Elsevier in 2007. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Media Library immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.
Description:
A classic method to assess animal populations is to mark a population, release them into the wild, and make measurements on individuals that are captured after a period of time. The objective of this study was to determine whether earthworms can assimilate and retain sufficient rubidium (Rb) in their tissues to differentiate marked and unmarked earthworms. Fifty adult and 50 juvenile earthworms (Aporrectodea turgida (Eisen)) were placed in individual pots with soil containing 500mgRbkg^-^1 for 1 week. Earthworms assimilated Rb at rates of 23-26@mgRbg^-^1 earthworm fresh weightday^-^1, and the Rb concentration in earthworm tissue was 100-fold greater than in unmarked earthworms after 1 week. When we transferred marked earthworms to clean soil, they eliminated about 50% of the Rb in their tissues within 3 days. The Rb concentration declined exponentially during the elimination period, but remained 10 times greater in marked earthworms (78.6-112.4@mgRbg^-^1 oven-dry tissue) than unmarked earthworms (on average, 5.7@mgRbg^-^1 tissue). These results indicate that marking earthworms with Rb may be an effective way to track individuals and differentiate marked earthworms from indigenous populations in ecological release-recapture studies.
Marking earthworms for release-recapture studies using the trace element rubidium [An article from: Applied Soil Ecology]
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