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No. Experiments have shown that earthworms do not die when cut in two, and they slowly grow into two separate individuals.
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Definitely, because the body is no longer complete, so all the functions cannot be used.
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Cut the earthworm in half, the earthworm will not die, because the earthworm has the ability to regenerate. The part that was chopped off. It can continue to grow into a complete earthworm.
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Cutting the earthworm in two will not die, because the internal structure of the earthworm is repeated and repeated, and separating the repeated parts can reorganize the cells in the blood, so that the wound closes quickly and forms a new cell mass.
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If an earthworm is cut in two, it will generally not die if it does not harm its vital organs. Because the internal structure of the earthworm is repetitive.
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If an earthworm is cut in two, it will not die as long as the environment and temperature are suitable, but will become two earthworms after dozens of days of growth.
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Earthworms don't die when cut in two; Earthworms are a special type of reliant animal. If an earthworm is cut in two pieces in the middle, it will not die, but will instead become two complete worms.
When it is cut into two sections, the muscle tissue on its section immediately strengthens the contraction, and a part of the muscle cells quickly dissolves to form a new cell mass, and the blood cells in the blood are focused on the cut surface at the same time, forming a special embolism, so that the wound is quickly closed.
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It depends on how you cut it.
If it is cut into two sections, it will not die.
If you're cutting lengthwise, you're definitely going to die.
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No, and it will become a two-of-a-kind.
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No, it has the ability to regenerate.
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I don't know what the reason is, but I saw on TV that it was said in two paragraphs, and only the severed one with a head would survive and grow a tail. The tail segment will die. 1l It is not correct to say that "a new head will grow on the cut of the missing head". You can't live without a head.
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Are you sure you're an earthworm and not a snake?