Leave it in, it'll eat detritus and aerate the roots and leave by the drainage hole in the night if its not satisfied with its environment.
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Leave to where, though? Personally I would relocate the worm to the outdoor garden where I have seen plenty of worm friends rather than risk a pet hurting him when he decides to relocate. If the potted plant was being kept outdoors I would leave the worm in.
Leave from the pot to earth. They can smell decaying plant matter, and even if it (earthworms are hermaphrodites btw) went over the side, they can easily survive a foot drop. It takes just a minute or two for one to crawl from one side of a sidewalk to another, five or ten minutes to make its way from one side of a patio to another, at a time when most animals that might prey on them (or accidentally step on them) are sleeping. The risk is minimal and no less than any other worm transiting overground to a new site, which is quite common.
It's an indoor plant, so I guess finding it's way out of the apartment would be the challenge.
On a re-read of the post, I don't see it stated either way. While I've definitely made an unwarranted assumption of it being outdoors now you bring it up, I don't think it's definitely indoors either. The textile in the background of the picture is the only real clue I'm seeing, and even that could be the back of some patio furniture. Lighting maybe artificial...
I don't know if earthworms have some reproduction-limiting mechanism for restricted ecosystems. I doubt it, frankly. I don't think there'd be any problems for the plant, but the worms would probably eat themselves to death within a year or so.
It's an indoors office plant. If it ends up leaving the pot, it'll likely end up getting rolled over by some chair wheels.
Given the soil mix I used, it'll likely be very happy for the rest of its life.
Don't! Earth worms are great for the soil and won't harm your plants.
To better chances of worm survival:
- Don't let the pot dry out fully
- Don't use artificial fertilizer
- Water with filtered water or water that has sat out for at least 24hrs so the chlorine can evaporate
If they like it well enough, they could have offspring on their own.
You can leave it in; it should help the plant out.
But be aware - many earthworms are actually super invasive species! They’re actually very bad for insect populations & such.
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