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| ===Pot Worm=== | | ===Pot Worm=== |
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| Enchytraeidae is a family of microdrile oligochaetes. They resemble small earthworms and include both terrestrial species known as potworms that live in highly organic terrestrial environments, as well as some that are marine. Compost Garden Soil Has Worms. If you've added materials that change the pH balance in your compost pile or if rain showers have made it much wetter than usual, you might notice a large collection of white, small, thread-like worms working their way through the heap. The enchytraeids, or pot worms are a smaller version of an earthworm, but are unable to consume leaf matter and detritus in the same way. They gain most of their nutrients by consuming fungal hyphae and bacterial material, together with the frass or excreta from other soil animals.
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| *Scientific name: Enchytraeidae
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| *Rank: Family
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| *Higher classification: Haplotaxids
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| *Family: Enchytraeidae; Vejdovský, 1879
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| *Order: Tubificida
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| *Phylum: Annelida
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| Pin Worm VS Pot Worm | | Pin Worm VS Pot Worm |
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| ===Whip Worm=== | | ===Whip Worm=== |
| Trichuris trichiura, Trichocephalus trichiuris or whipworm, is a parasitic roundworm that causes trichuriasis when it infects a human large intestine. It is commonly known as the whipworm which refers to the shape of the worm; it looks like a whip with wider "handles" at the posterior end.
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| *Scientific name: Trichuris trichiura
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| *Family: Trichuridae
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| *Kingdom: Animalia
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| *Order: Trichocephalida
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| *Phylum: Nematoda
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| ===Tape Worm=== | | ===Tape Worm=== |
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| Cestoda is a class of parasitic worms in the flatworm phylum. Most of the species—and the best-known—are those in the subclass Eucestoda; they are ribbon-like worms as adults, known as tapeworms
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| *Scientific name: Cestoda
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| *Rank: Class
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| *Kingdom: Animalia
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| *Phylum: Platyhelminthes
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