anecic

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English

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Etymology

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From French anécique, coined by Marcel B. Bouché, French earthworm biologist (1971),[1][2][3] from Ancient Greek ἀνέχω (anékhō, to rise up, emerge).

Adjective

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anecic (not comparable)

  1. (of earthworms) Building deep vertical burrows and surfacing to feed.
    Coordinate terms: endogeic, epigeic
    • 2013 February 3, I.M. Lubbers et al., “Greenhouse gas emissions from soils increased by earthworms”, in Nature Climate Change[3]:
      “... (1) anecic species, which feed on fresh litter from the soil surface and pull it deep into the soil in permanent burrows...”

Derived terms

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Translations

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References

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  1. ^ M. B. Bouché (1971) “Relations entre les structures spatiales et fonctionnelles des écosystèmes illustrées par le rôle pédobiologique des vers en terre”, in Pesson, editor, La vie dans les sols, Editions Gauthier-Villars, pages 187-209
  2. ^ M. B. Bouché (1975) “Fonctions des lombriciens III: Premières estimations quantitatives des stations françaises du P.B.I.”, in Revue d'écologie et de biologie du sol[1], volume 12, number 1, pages 25-44
  3. ^ Marcel Bouché (actor) (2018), 32:36 from the start, in Marcel BOUCHE - 600 Unités d'Azote grâce aux Vers de Terre[2] (in French), via YouTube. Bouché explains that anécique comes from the Greek term "anechos", meaning "climbing" (« qui monte »).

Anagrams

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