Nobody Knows Why Giant Piles Of Worms Are Mysteriously Lining Up In Texas

Nobody Knows Why Giant Piles Of Worms Are Mysteriously Lining Up In Texas

After floods hit Denison, Texas last week, park rangers were mystified to find stringy clumps dotting the rain-soaked streets in inexplicably organised lines. It was no pasta-based apres-flood prank. It was just piles of living, squiggling worms.

Eisenhower State Park Superintendent Ben Herman told ABC News that rangers aren’t sure what’s up with the worms. “Even our biologist doesn’t know why they’re spaced so well and in the line,” he said.

They do know that the piles are definitely worms:

Rangers decided to poke the piles with a stick to ensure that there were only worms in the spaghetti-looking clumps.

Nobody Knows Why Giant Piles Of Worms Are Mysteriously Lining Up In Texas

The rangers have a few theories about why the worms chose the “WormKing” approach to storm survival: The worms may have simply crowded into the driest bits of pavement, or they may have clumped as a defence mechanism after mistaking the rain for a predator.

Texas dealt with 35 trillion gallons of rain in May, so that would be one hell of a predator. It’s not clear why they arranged themselves in such an orderly fashion (German worms?) but no other parts of Texas reported the same nightmare-pasta worm piles, so this is a very location-specific mystery.

As quickly as the wiggly visitors appeared, they were gone. Herman says the worms stayed for two days. “It was pretty entertaining to watch the worms do their thing,” he told ABC News.

[ABC News]

Images from Eisenhower State Park via ABC News


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