Abstract
AGES have passed since the cultivator first realised the value of rivers as agents in fertilising the soil. The Nile is the classical illustration, and everyone has learned in early life to think of Egypt as being dependent on the life-giving waters for its fertility. But have the reasons for that ever been sufficiently investigated? Probably the majority of people would say that the waters of the Nile bring down vast quantities of soil and disintegrated rock from the heart of Africa, and this earthy matter, held in suspension or carried down by the river in spate, contains the chemical elements which are essential to the growth of plants. I believe that is the usually accepted theory; but does it go to the root of things? Others find the secret in the action of bacteria. I grant the point, but do not think it fully accounts for the facts. I have for some years been engaged in the study of our fresh-water annelids and their place in the economy of nature. I had occasion a few days ago to bring home from the banks of one of our Midland rivers some of the ooze from its banks. When I collected it I found some half-dozen specimens of a common fresh-water worm wriggling about in the slimy mass; but when I came to examine it at leisure, with pocket lens and microscope, I found it to be teeming with life. Vast numbers of tiny annelids (Tubifex templetoni, Southern, or an allied species), minute larvæ, and other living things were to be seen, and at once the question arose, Would the ooze, detritus, alluvium, or disintegrated rock of itself be so special a fertiliser if this teeming life were absent? The ooze is enriched both by the passing of the matter through the bodies of the animals and by the nitrogen from their corpses.
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FRIEND, H. Ooze and Irrigation. Nature 83, 427 (1910). https://doi.org/10.1038/083427c0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/083427c0
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