The California Blackworm

Very interesting, I want to keep and multiply these worms to feed to my discus. I'd like to do it myself largely to ensure the worms are clean and don't infect my discus. Can you tell us more about the selecting, introducing, keeping, and harvesting of these blackworms?
 
Very interesteing read...but im a little confused about something. Are you doing this for fish food or because you just like Blackworms? ...

I like blackworms because of their role in keeping sand beds alive AND because they are a stimulating diversion for those fish which eat them AND because blackworms are just sorta neat.

I definitely don't bother raising worms as fish food. Actually, my fish eat them up a little faster than they can reproduce so periodically I spend a dollar at my LFS and get another ounce to seed the tank with.

Saltwater deep sand bed setups inspire me as does D. Walstad's writing on freshwater planted tanks. It's about having a managed ecosystem which does much to handle managing water quality and algae, etc. Blackworms are one of a very few options for freshwater critters which keep the sand bed open and alive without manual stirring.
 
Very interesting, I want to keep and multiply these worms to feed to my discus. I'd like to do it myself largely to ensure the worms are clean and don't infect my discus. Can you tell us more about the selecting, introducing, keeping, and harvesting of these blackworms?

I have been reading about these worms more and was thinking about introducing them into my 55G mineralized soil substrate planted tank. How long have you had them in your tank and what is your tank size?

Well, my current tank is a tiny, 9 gallon bowfront (Odyssea model B9) with the built-in filter removed and a weak internal filter instead, to create a very still, pond like environment with only weak currents. It is heavily planted with a 2.5 to 3 inch deep coarse river sand substrate. I never vacuum or stir the sand - ever. I've been keeping blackworms in sand substrate for three years. Two years in the current tank.

I'll address a few things about raising blackworms. They like clean water, unlike their distant cousins, the tubifex worms. They seem to reproduce pretty readily in my setup, though my fish do eat them up a bit faster than they multiply. If I want to feed my neighbor's betta, I just use a turkey baster to suck up a bunch of sand. The sand settles in the baster before the worms do and I can squirt the sand back where it came from and keep the worms.

If I wanted to breed the worms, I'd do it in a lightly planted, deep sand (about 2.5-3 inches) bed or soil based substrate tank with small shrimp and no fish in it that would eat the worms. The mulm from the fish/shrimp and any uneaten food is where the bacteria the worms eat grow. As the mulm disintegrates and sifts downwards into the sand, it creates the zone of yummy muck which the worms love to stick their heads into. Soil would also create a worm-favoring environment. Yeah, come to think of it, I'd definitely want to experiment with a soil (non-mineralized) substrate. Maybe a mix of 1/4 soil and 3/4 sand.

Cool thing about cali blackworms is that they don't like polluted, nasty water like tubifex worms do and consequently carry few pathogens compared to them. They actually like to propagate in the mud at the bottom of trout ponds in fish farms. Trout, if you don't know this, require very clean, cool water.

How to be sure they're disease free I don't really know. I'd think that treating a batch of them with gram negative and gram positive broad spectrum antibiotics, some anti-fluke-antiprotozoal stuff like "Life Bearer," might do the trick. Then breed the treated worms in isolation! I've used "Life Bearer" and "Quick Cure" with no apparent ill effects on my worms. Probably anything other than antihelminthic medication is alright. I can't find any information on pathogens the worms might possibly carry but I'm sure there are some possible bugs that could hitchhike with them into your fish.

Shoot, this posting feels really disorganized. I'll try to round up some more sources of solid info and sum them up.
 
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The following is a page from this link: http://www.eeob.iastate.edu/faculty/DrewesC/htdocs/Lvgen4.htm

Lumbriculus variegatus: A Biology Profile
(by C. Drewes -- document last updated 9-04)
http://www.eeob.iastate.edu/faculty/DrewesC/htdocs
CULTURING WORMS: www.eeob.iastate.edu/faculty/DrewesC/htdocs/LVCULT.htm
WORM SOURCES: www.eeob.iastate.edu/faculty/DrewesC/htdocs/WORMSO5.htm

The freshwater oligochaete, Lumbriculus variegatus is not widely known to biologists but may be used to vividly illustrate a wide variety of biological phenomena such as: patterned regeneration of lost body parts, blood vessel pulsations, swimming reflex, peristaltic crawling behavior, giant nerve fiber action potentials, and sublethal sensitivity to pharmacological agents or environmental toxicants. This brief document provides general background information about Lumbriculus biology that is not generally available in biology or invertebrate zoology texts.

Classification and Evolution
Although superficially resembling tubifex worms, Lumbriculus is placed in the Order Lumbriculida, a group that is separate from both tubifex worms and earthworms, which are in the orders Tubificida and Haplotaxida, respectively (Jamieson, 1981):

Phylum: Annelida
Class: Oligochaeta
Order: Lumbriculida
Family: Lumbriculidae
Genus sp: Lumbriculus variegatus
Common names: California blackworms; blackworms; mudworms

Evolutionary relationships between this group and other annelids are not well understood or agreed upon. Some biologists suggest that the Order Lumbriculida may be an early stem group in the oligochaete branch of annelid evolution. But interpretations are complicated by variability in the number and location of gonads in the Lumbriculidae, a feature common in worms that reproduce asexually by fragmentation.

Lumbriculus Habitat, Lifestyle and Reproduction
Lumbriculus is found throughout North America and Europe. It prefers shallow habitats at the edges of ponds, lakes, or marshes where it feeds on decaying vegetation and microorganisms. Favorite microhabitats include layers of decomposing leaves, submerged rotting logs, or sediments at the base of emergent vegetation, such as cattails. Lumbriculus may also occupy silty sediments from deeper water, but other oligochaetes such as tubificids (tubifex worms) are more common in these habitats.

In nature, Lumbriculus uses its head to forage in sediments and debris, while its tail end, specialized for gas exchange, often projects upwards. When possible, the worm stretches its tail vertically to the water surface where it forms a right angle bend and breaks the water surface tension. This posture facilitates gas exchange between the air and the pulsating dorsal blood vessel lying just beneath the epidermis. This respiratory behavior markedly contrasts with that of tubificid worms, which often undulate their tail ends as they protrude from burrows in sediments well below the water surface.

Field-collected Lumbriculus are often larger than laboratory-reared worms. Maximal body size is about 10 cm in length (approximately 200-250 segments) and 1.5 mm in diameter. Such specimens appear as sexually mature hermaphrodites. Although never documented, sexual reproduction in mature worms probably involves copulation and sperm exchange, as seen in many earthworms. Then, worms produce transparent cocoons, each containing 4-11 fertilized eggs that undergo direct embryonic development with no larval stage (Drewes and Brinkhurst, 1990). Small worms, about 1 cm in length, emerge from cocoons in about two weeks.

Worms cultured under standard laboratory conditions are usually small (4-6 cm in length) compared to field-collected ones, and never reach sexual maturity or produce cocoons. Reproduction under laboratory conditions is always by asexual fragmentation, during which a worm spontaneously divides into two or more body fragments.

Each surviving fragment then undergoes rapid regeneration of body segments to form a new head end, tail end, or both ends. Eventually each fragment grows into a normal sized worm comprising a combination of older and newer segments, representing two or more generations of development.

The capacity for asexual reproduction by fragmentation is matched by the ability to self-amputate in response to injury or other types of noxious stimulation. This protective reflex response is referred to as autotomy. One stimulus which causes worms to readily autotomize is body compression (Lesiuk and Drewes, 1999a). A sudden compression stimulus, which presumably simulates a predatory attack, induces rapid and clean division of the body in less than 1/5 of a second.

Anatomical and Physiological Gradient
Distinguishing head and tail ends of these worms is not difficult because head segments are more darkly pigmented, wider, and more maneuverable than tail segments. Specialized structures in the first 8-10 anterior segments include a conical prostomium, muscular pharynx, as well as male and female sex organs (hermaphroditism).

Although more posterior segments appear very similar to each other, there are important differences in their structure and function along the body. These differences are subtle and gradual, usually appearing as anterior-to-posterior gradients that affect nearly every organ system.

Unlike oligochaetes, such as leeches and most earthworms, the regional and numerical identity of segments in Lumbriculus is not finalized once segments have matured. For example, body segments in middle and posterior regions retain an ability to dramatically transform their identity to that of much more anterior segments. This transformation is closely tied to its remarkable ability to reproduce copies of itself by a combination of self-fragmentation and segment regeneration (Drewes and Fourtner, 1990; Lesiuk and Drewes, 2001b).

Muscular and Support Systems
Muscles in the body wall of Lumbriculus, as in most oligochaete worms, are arranged into two distinct layers - the circular and longitudinal muscle layers. These form more or less continuous and cylindrical sheets which wrap around each body segment. Muscle fibers in these layers are classified as obliquely striated fibers (Jamieson, 1981). Because there are no hard skeletal elements to which these muscles attach, the forces produced when they contract simply act upon the inner, fluid-filled body compartments - specifically, the coelomic cavity and gut. The result is that segments change shape but not volume, since fluids are not compressible. This design, referred to as a hydrostatic skeleton, is typical of many burrowing invertebrates which lack appendages.

The circular and longitudinal muscle layers act in opposition to one another. When muscle fibers contract in the outer, circular muscle layer, segments constrict in diameter and lengthen. When fibers contract in the longitudinal muscle layer, which is just inside the circular layer, segments shorten and increase in diameter. Very little is known about the electrical, biochemical, or physiological properties of muscle cells in Lumbriculus.

In addition to the circular and longitudinal muscle layers, there are a few other accessory muscles in the body, including small muscles that cause protrusion and retraction of the chaetae (= setae, or bristles) in each segment. There are four pairs of chaetae in a typical body segment of Lumbriculus and these are positioned laterally and ventrally, very similar to the pattern seen in the common earthworm, Lumbricus terrestris. When the worm is crawling, chaetae are protruded in those segments that are undergoing shortening and thickening due to longitudinal muscle contraction. This helps to anchor these segments to the substrate on which the worm is crawling. In contrast, chaetae are retracted in segments that are undergoing elongation and thinning due to circular muscle contraction.

Blood and Circulation
As in earthworms, Lumbriculus blood is red, due to a hemoglobin-like blood pigment, erythrocruorin, dissolved in the plasma. Blood circulates in a closed system of vessels and capillaries. It is pumped by rhythmic contractions of the dorsal blood vessel which moves the blood, segment by segment, from the posterior end (the main site of gas exchange) toward the head.

A diagnostic feature of Lumbriculus and related species is the presence of paired pulsatile lateral vessels that branch off the dorsal blood vessel in most body segments. Pulsations in these lateral vessels are coordinated with pulsations of the dorsal vessel and appear to serve an auxiliary pumping function (Stephenson, 1930).

Blood vessel pulsations and patterns of circulation are readily observed in whole worms because the body wall of Lumbriculus is transparent. At any time, numerous pulsation waves may be seen moving blood forward along the dorsal blood vessel. The large ventral blood vessel that carries blood back to the tail is also easily seen but is not contractile. Pulsation rate is sensitive to pharmacological agents and is significantly accelerated by both caffeine and nicotine (Lesiuk and Drewes, 1999b).

Nervous System, Reflexes, and Locomotion
The central nervous system consists of a fused cerebral (supra-esophageal) ganglion in segment #1 and a ventral nerve cord that extends continuously along the entire body. In a typical segment, the ventral nerve cord has four pairs of segmental nerves that extend laterally and dorsally around the body wall (Stephenson, 1930). Some segmental nerve fibers are sensory in function and detect stimulation of the body surface; others are motor fibers that innervate body wall muscle or gland cells.

Sensory structures in the body wall of Lumbriculus include simple photoreceptor cells that sense shadow (Drewes and Fourtner, 1989), mechanosensory neurons that detect touch, vibration, or pressure, as well as chemosensory cells (Jamieson, 1981). Though their function has not been studied, chemosensory cell might be useful in detecting water-borne chemicals, such as nutrients from food sources or possibly dissolved oxygen.

As the tail lies at the water surface, an approaching shadow above, or sudden vibration below, may signal a life-threatening attack by a predator (e.g., bird, amphibian, aquatic insect larva, leech, crayfish, or small fish). As a defense, the worm senses these stimuli and initiates a rapid escape (or startle) response, in which it reflexively withdraws its tail by sudden contraction of longitudinal muscles (Drewes and Fourtner, 1989). A similar head withdrawal occurs in response to an abrupt touch of the head.

Both of these reflex responses are mediated by giant nerve fibers located within the ventral nerve cord along the entire body. These giant fibers function as conduits for rapid conduction of nerve impulses that, in turn, trigger activity in motor neurons and longitudinal muscle, thus causing body shortening (Drewes and Fourtner, 1989; Drewes and Brinkhurst, 1990). Recent research (Lesiuk and Drewes, 2001a,b) has shown that giant nerve fibers in Lumbriculus have a remarkable capacity for rapid restoration of function following ventral nerve cord transection or ablation. Functional reconnection of severed giant fibers can occur within 10 hours!

Other reflex responses in Lumbriculus are also possible and these depend on the environmental surroundings of the worm and the type of the stimulus. For example, when a worm is lying on a rough surface and tail segments are touched, it reflexively responds by forward peristaltic crawling. During forward crawling, alternating waves of circular and longitudinal muscle contraction are produced. These waves begin in anterior segments and move rearward along the body, resulting in forward propulsion. When a worm is lying on rough substrate and head segments are touched, it responds by backward crawling movements in which peristaltic waves of body contraction move from the tail toward the head. The term retrograde is used to describe waves of muscle contraction that move in a direction opposite to the actual direction of body propulsion (see Drewes and Cain, 1999).

In addition to rapid escape and crawling movements, worms are capable of two other rather unique locomotor responses that occur only when they are submerged in an open area with no shelter around them and little traction beneath. One of these responses is an unusual undulatory swimming behavior, initiated by sudden touch to tail segments (Drewes, 1999; Drewes and Cain, 1999). During such swimming, worms rapidly twist their body into a helical coil that moves backward, in wave-like fashion, along the body. Rhythmic passage of such waves along the body provides propulsive thrust that moves the body forward. Although it happens too quickly to detect with the naked eye, each successive wave alternates between a clockwise and counter-clockwise helical twisting shape. Typically, one swim episode lasts only a few cycles and propels the worm about one or two body lengths away from the threatening stimulus.

A second type of reflex response, also seen when worms are in submerged in open areas with little traction, is body reversal (Drewes, 1999; Drewes and Cain, 1999). Reversal, evoked by suddenly touching head segments, occurs in a fraction of a second. During this time, the worm rapidly coils and then uncoils its body, often resulting in an approximate 180 degree reversal of the long axis of its body. By reversing, the worm is better positioned to swim away if and when another stimulus occurs near the first.

Opportunity
Until recently, Lumbriculus worms had been completely over-looked for purposes of both biology research and education. Nevertheless, they offer great promise for new, inexpensive, and user-friendly experiments for student laboratory activities. They also offer opportunity for basic research studies of physiology, development, behavior, environmental biology and toxicology (Drewes, 1997). For further clarification, please feel free to contact: C. Drewes, Rm 503 Science II Bldg (EEOB), Iowa State University, Ames, 50011. For complete listing of educational and research references about this worm, see:
http://www.eeob.iastate.edu/faculty/DrewesC/htdocs

References
● Brinkhurst, R. O. and S. R. Gelder (1991) Annelida: Oligochaeta and Branchiobdellida, In Ecology and Classification of North American Freshwater Invertebrates (T. H. Thorp and A. P. Covich, Eds.), Academic Press, New York.
● Drewes, C. D. (1999) Helical swimming and body reversal behaviors in Lumbriculus variegatus (Family Lumbriculidae). Hydrobiologia 406:263-269.
● Drewes, C. D. and R. O. Brinkhurst (1990) Giant fibers and rapid escape reflexes in newly hatched aquatic oligochaetes, Lumbriculus variegatus (Family Lumbriculida). Invertebrate Reproduction and Development 17:91-95.
● Drewes, C. D. (1997) Sublethal effects of environmental toxicants on oligochaete escape reflexes. American Zoologist. 37:346-353.
● Drewes, C. and K. Cain (1999) As the worm turns: Locomotion in a freshwater oligochaete worm. American Biology Teacher 61:438-442.
● Drewes, C. D. and C. R. Fourtner (1989) Hindsight and rapid escape in a freshwater oligochaete. Biological Bulletin (Woods Hole) 177:363-371.
Drewes, C. D. and C. R. Fourtner (1990) Morphallaxis in an aquatic oligochaete, Lumbriculus variegatus: Reorganization of escape reflexes in regenerating body fragment. Developmental Biology 138:94-103.
● Jamieson, B. G. M. (1981) The Ultrastructure of the Oligochaeta, Academic Press, New York.
● Lesiuk and Drewes (1999a) Autotomy reflex in a freshwater oligochaete, Lumbriculus variegatus. Hydrobiologia 406:253-261.
● Lesiuk, N. M. and C. D. Drewes (1999b) Blackworms, blood vessel pulsations, and drug effects. American Biology Teacher 61:48-53.
● Lesiuk, N. and C. D. Drewes (2001a) Behavioral plasticity and central regeneration of locomotor reflexes in the freshwater oligochaete, Lumbriculus variegatus. I. Transection studies, Invertebrate Biology 120:248-258.
● Lesiuk, N. and C. D. Drewes (2001b) Behavioral plasticity and central regeneration of locomotor reflexes in the freshwater oligochaete, Lumbriculus variegatus. II. Ablation studies. Invertebrate Biology 120:259-268.
● Stephenson, J. (1930) The Oligochaeta, Clarendon Press, Oxford.
 
Oh, I meant to thank everyone for their supportive comments! I hope I've been helpful and informative. I'm really enjoying doing a little bit of research and sharing what I get out of it. I'm just an amateur so I hope y'all forgive the errors and will chime in with any corrections.

I am very inspired by Diana Walstad's book "Ecology of the Planted Aquarium," which encouraged me to think outside the sometimes hidebound and dogmatic views of the traditional aquarium hobby. Though my approach isn't Walstad's, it never would have come to be were it not for her book. I very highly recommend her book, if just for the information it contains.

One can approach the hobby from a traditional approach, relying on hearsay, rumors, and handed down recipes and techniques (like the inch per gallon rule) OR one can work with the facts and realities of aquaculture. Walstad provides many useful facts.
 
i googled on how to get planaria in a tank but was it long/difficult to get them in yours?

A friend of mine had these crazy big planaria swarming one of his tank walls so I asked for some. We sucked up a bunch with a turkey baster and I brought 'em home in a fish shop plastic bag full of tank water. At first I thought they hadn't taken but after like six weeks or two months they started making appearances. Unlike my friend's flatworms, mine don't swarm and they hide when the light is turned on.

I like planaria as another part of the whole living sand idea. They get in between the grains of sand and help digest all the mulm. Good stuff! Have I mentioned yet that I hate the idea of vacuuming my substrate and will go to lengths to make it unnecessary?
 
I should mention that I think my worms reproduce sexually as well as by fragmentation. Tiny, short and hairlike worms make their appearance fairly often and I know they're blackworms because they do that weird spiral swimming thing unique to blackworms when disturbed. They're so thin there's no way they formed from fragments. Also I've seen what I think are worm cocoons.

I'm thinking of setting up this empty five gallon tank to raise worms, MTS and shrimps in. Probably red cherry or crystal shrimps since I never see them successfully catching and eating blackworms. I'll post about it here when I get it going. First I have to cycle it and all that jazz. I think I'll try mixing 10% soil with 90% coarse river sand and plant some anchored water hyacinths.
 
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