Earthworms are inhibited by acid soils and/or soils deficient in calcium. Far larger
populations of worms live in soils that weathered out of underlying limestone rocks. In
one experiment, earthworm counts in a pasture went up from 51,000 per acre in acid soil to
441,000 per acre two years after lime and a non-acidifying chemical fertilizer was spread.
Rodale and Howard loudly and repeatedly contended that chemical fertilizers decimate
earthworm populations. Swept up in what I view as a self-righteous crusade against
chemical agriculture, they included all fertilizers in this category for tactical reasons.
Location Worms per sq. ft. Worms per acre Marcellus, NY 38 1,600,000 Ithica, NY 4
190,000 Frederick, MD 50 2,200,000 Beltsville, MD 8 350,000 Zanesville, OH 37 1,600,000
Coshocton, OH 5 220,000 Mayaquez, P.R.* 6 260,000
*Because of the high rate of bacterial decomposition, few earthworms are found in
tropical soils unless they are continuously ammended with substantial quantities of
organic matter.
Howard especially denigrated sulfate of ammonia and single superphosphate as earthworm
poisons. Both of these chemical fertilizers are made with sulfuric acid and have a
powerful acidifying reaction when they dissolve in soil. Rodale correctly pointed out that
golf course groundskeepers use repeated applications of ammonium sulfate to eliminate
earthworms from putting greens. (Small mounds of worm casts made by nightcrawlers ruin the
greens' perfectly smooth surface so these worms are the bane of greenskeepers.) However,
ammonium sulfate does not eliminate or reduce worms when the soil contains large amounts
of chalk or other forms of calcium that counteract acidity.
The truth of the matter is that worms eat decaying organic matter and any soil
amendment that increases plant growth without acidifying soil will increase earthworm food
supply and thus worm population. Using lime as an antidote to acid-based fertilizers
prevents making the soil inhospitable to earthworms. And many chemical fertilizers do not
provoke acid reactions. The organic movement loses this round-but not the battle. And
certainly not the war.
Food supply primarily determines earthworm population. To increase their numbers it is
merely necessary to bring in additional organic matter or add plant nutrients that cause
more vegetation to be grown there. In one study, simply returning the manure resulting
from hay taken off a pasture increased earthworms by one-third. Adding lime and
superphosphate to that manure made an additional improvement of another 33 percent. Every
time compost is added to a garden, the soil's ability to support earthworms increases.