
Paul Hendrix
A scientist who studies soils.
Non Forest Service

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My favorite science experience was conducting an earthworm survey in an old-growth Douglas-fir forest in Oregon. The air was cool and smelled like conifers. All we found were native earthworms under a thick forest floor that was covered with ferns, mushrooms, and slowly decaying logs. It was like walking back in time to the origins of the mountains, soils, and organisms that evolved there.
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Native earthworms are important to the health of forests. Native earthworms help maintain the forest floor by eating leaves and other plant materials. These earthworms tunnel and eat through soil,...
Worming Their Way In: Invading Earthworms in the Southeastern United States
Native earthworms are important to the health of forests. Native earthworms help maintain the forest floor by eating leaves and other plant materials. These earthworms tunnel and eat through soil,...