DUN Magazine
  • Home
  • About
Sign in Subscribe

Aquatic Earthworms

Jen Ripple

15 Jun 2017 — 1 min read
Aquatic Earthworms

Aquatic earthworms are a close relative to the terrestrial earthworms and live their entire two years of life underwater.

They are one of several different types of aquatic worms found in fresh waters all over the world.

Aquatic earthworms are the earth movers of the underwater landscape and play an important role in keeping a body of water healthy by eating plant and animal detritus.

These earthworms are hermaphrodites, both genders produce eggs when needed.

Like regular earthworms, they can regenerate their body if injured.

I never knew about aquatic earthworms until I was taking a hike this spring and spotted this mass gathering in a spring creek bed.  The mass gathering explains why “noodling” is possible to catch catfish during the time of year when the worms ball up in a mass as seen here on the hike.  Always worth keeping your eyes peeled for what nature has to teach us.  I’ll be tying up some aquatic earthworm patterns now!

Read more

Coming soon

Coming soon

This is DUN Magazine, a brand new site by Kurt Kopala that's just getting started. Things will be up and running here shortly, but you can subscribe in the meantime if you'd like to stay up to date and receive emails when new content is published!

By Kurt Kopala 23 Dec 2025
The Simms Guide Classic Wader and Jacket

The Simms Guide Classic Wader and Jacket

I’m a bit of a gear junkie. I love good gear and I love good technology. I can also tend to be a brand snob. When I got into fly fishing back in the day, I wore Simms boy’s waders, casted a Sage 9’ 5-wt Light Line and

By Jen Ripple 25 Feb 2021
Family Ties that Bind

Family Ties that Bind

Seated in the Blue Ridge Mountains of Georgia, Noontootla Creek Farms is a private hunting and fishing preserve, consisting of 1200 acres and two miles of premiere trophy trout stream. My great grandfather, Frank Owenby, a businessman from Marietta, Georgia purchased this property we now call home in 1954 in

By Jen Ripple 21 Feb 2021
Survival of the Fittest - Or Most Prepared

Survival of the Fittest - Or Most Prepared

This is the current view from my office window…in Tennessee.  I moved here from Chicago four years ago because I wanted to be somewhere warm, without that white stuff, and without the single-digit temperatures. To say I feel like I was sold a bill of goods this morning when

By Jen Ripple 16 Feb 2021
DUN Magazine
  • Sign up
Powered by Ghost

DUN Magazine

Thoughts, stories and ideas.