EXTINCT GIANT WHITE WORMS FOUND!

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NPR and Krem have reported that scientists at the University of Idaho have captured no less than two specimens of the now fabled giant Palouse earthworm.

The giant Palouse earthworm (GPE) is a big white worm native to the Palouse prairie region of Idaho and Washington State. The worm was discovered in 1897, and was said to be abundant in the late 19th century, then they suddenly seemed to disappear. In fact by the 1980s the worm was thought to have gone extinct, and there were those who doubted that it had ever existed to begin with.

That was until March 27, 2010, when scientist Karl Umiker and a graduate student made an amazing discovery on an unplowed patch of land. Umiker partially credits the discovery to a new tool at his worm-hunting arsenal — the “electroshocker.” After jolting the soil, Umiker dug around and managed to capture the worm that is now sitting in a freezer at the University of Kansas.

While the specimen recovered by Umiker is relatively small (about 8-inches) there are some eyewitnesses who claim that these creatures can reach much greater lengths. Soil ecologist Jodi Johnson-Maynard, who heads the project, is reticent to subscribe to these tall “worm” tales:

“There are reportings of a meter long earthworm, three feet long, but I haven’t seen that… Now, possibly if one of these guys lives a long time, but I think most common might be a foot or a little bit less.”

Besides their immense proportions, other rumors that have swirled around these creatures for years, including the fact that they allegedly smell like lilies and — much like the notorious MONGOLIAN DEATH WORM — they can spit at potential predators.

Sadly, not everybody is thrilled by the re-discovery of these rare creatures. Craig Fleener, a local farmer and a member of the Idaho Farm Bureau — which recently held a meeting to discuss the possibility that the GPE could end up on the endangered species list –- is worried about the harm these worms can cause farmers:

“I have concerns. There’s great potential for loss of freedom of what you can do with your land if the government comes in and says, ‘Well, you have to do such and such, or you can’t do such and such because we have to protect the giant Palouse earthworm.’ “

Fleener believes the country is moving toward socialism, and any effort to list the worm as endangered is another step in that direction. In fact, local conservation groups are pressing the government to list the worm. One petition was turned down in 2007, but now the groups are trying again.

Although finds like the GPE are vary rare, colossal earthworms are not unheard of in other regions of the Earth. Perhaps the most famous example being Australia’s Giant Gippsland Earthworm.

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