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10.4: Large Soil Animals

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    35891
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    Very large soil animals, such as moles, rabbits, woodchucks, snakes, prairie dogs, and badgers, burrow in the soil and spend at least some of their lives below ground. Moles are secondary consumers; their diet consists mainly of earthworms. Most of the other very large soil animals exist on vegetation. In many cases, their presence is considered a nuisance for agricultural production or lawns and gardens.

    Nevertheless, their burrows may help conduct water away from the surface during downpours and thus decrease erosion. In the southern United States, the burrowing action of crawfish, abundant in many poorly drained soils, can have a large effect on soil structure and can encourage water infiltration. (In Texas and Louisiana, some rice fields are “rotated” with crawfish production.)


    This page titled 10.4: Large Soil Animals is shared under a CC BY-NC 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Valerie Dantoin via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform.