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Invasive Jumping Worms Spreading Across US, Including In VA

Officials said the aggressive species threatens soil structure and can also harm plant roots. Here's how to spot it.

Asian jumping worms, an invasive, soil nutrient-gobbling earthworm that can leap a foot in the air, are moving rapidly across the country. (Colorado Department of Agriculture)

Asian jumping worms, an invasive, soil nutrient-gobbling earthworm that can leap a foot in the air, are moving rapidly across the country, with sightings in 38 states, including Virginia.

Asian jumping worms — their scientific name is Amynthas agrestis — have earned their nickname and their reputation. They’re also called Alabama jumpers, Jersey wrigglers, wood eel, crazy worms, snake worms, and crazy snake worms.

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They have recently been spotted as far west as California and Colorado. According to data from EDDMapS, an online mapping service, the worm has been reported in the Appomattox-Buckingham State Forest in Virginia.

Other states reporting sightings include:

Northeast and Mid-Atlantic: Connecticut, Delaware, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Vermont and West Virginia.

Midwest: Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, Ohio and Wisconsin.

South and Southeast: Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina and Tennessee

West and Mountain West: California, Colorado, Oregon and Washington.

The jumping worm’s common names are descriptive of “the way they thrash around,” USDA Forest Service soil scientist Mac Callaham said in a post on the agency’s website. “They can flip themselves a foot off the ground.”

Harmless earthworms aerate the soil and help prep it for growth, but once jumping worms have had their way in your dirt, it will have the consistency of coffee grounds and be about as useful for growing anything but frustration. Jumping worms also elbow other species out of the way, according to experts.

Jumping worm populations grow quickly through a couple of generations a season. Like other worms, they’re hermaphrodites, meaning they have both male and female reproductive organs, but with a distinction: Jumping worms reproduce on their own.

Jumping worms expend a lot of energy, which they fuel by eating everything in their path. That includes leaf litter, the first layer of soil on the forest floor, home not only to many unseen tiny creatures but also an important source of nutrients that plants need to sprout and grow.

“Consumption of the leaf litter may remove nutrients from the topsoil, change the moisture level of the underlying soil, and increase soil erosion,” the Virginia Cooperative Extension wrote. “Plant communities may be altered as well with reduced survival of newly sprouted plants, resulting in reduced native biodiversity in forest ecosystems.”

Scientists say they need to learn more about the ecology of jumping worms before prescribing a management plan.

Jumping worms vary from red to brown in color. They can grow up to 6 inches in length, and their bodies may appear metallic. There’s no way to completely eradicate them, experts say, but some steps to control their spread include:

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