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He believes it's because for millions of years, moles have been eating worms, and they've developed an escape instinct when they sense the predators are burrowing nearby. The Revells, whose main source of income is selling the worms he gathers, work the Apalachicola National Forest, which covers nearly 600,000 acres southwest of Tallahassee, and Tate's Hell, immediately to the south. Before meeting the couple, Catania had never witnessed the practice. "It's amazing to me. There's nothing like going to see it. I thought it was incredible," Catania said Later, while sipping iced tea at the Revells' home, he put a mole into a bucket filled with dirt and worms. "It was amazing, man," Revell said. "When he dropped that mole in that bucket of worms, it was just like fear was in them. They come out of that ground, right out of that bucket. That pretty much let him know what he wanted to know about them. It was a predator/prey like thing." Catania repeated the experiment under more controlled conditions, filling a container with dirt and a specific number of worms, waiting until they were all settled under the surface, and then letting a mole loose through a tube at the bottom of the container. The worms soon began fleeing out the top as fast as they could.
He also filled a much larger container with worms and ran a water sprinkler over it, simulating rain. The worms didn't rush out. That helped disprove the theory Revell has long had about why grunting works. "This particular study was just wonderful because each little step made so much sense," Catania said. "It just all sort of fit together one piece after another, all stemming from that original thought Darwin had."
[Associated
Press;
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