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A Palouse native, not seen in nearly two decades and feared
extinct, has been rediscovered. While digging soil samples at the
Washington State University botany department’s Smoot Hill
preserve, University of Idaho graduate student Yaniria Sanchez-de
Leon noticed a glimpse of white. Quick with her shovel, she
captured the six-inch specimen of Driloreirus americanus,
also known as the giant Palouse earthworm. Historically, specimens
have been recorded as long as three feet. Although an observer
reported it as “abundant� in the Palouse in 1897, tillage and
competition from European earthworms seem to have taken their
toll.
Smoot Hill contains the largest remnant of native Palouse
prairie. Purchased by WSU in 1972, the 800-acre farm is also known
as the Hudson Ecological Reserve, after biologist George Hudson,
who negotiated the deal. More than 100 acres of the land are
unplowed steppe. Another 100 acres are relatively undisturbed
Ponderosa woodland. Research at the area has examined weed
invasion, small mammal population biology, plant and insect
relationships, and, of course, earthworm populations.
--Tim Steury
Washington State Magazine Home
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