![]() | ||
slug damage |
Garden crops have a lot of enemies, but few are as non-selective and destructive as slugs. Unlike plant diseases and many insect pests, slugs are not host-specific and have a very diverse diet from asters to zinnias, with hostas being one of their favorites. As much as we hate them for the damage they do to our garden plants, we need to recognize slugs as an important part of the ecosystems because many species are decomposers and feed on fallen leaves, dead insects and dead worms. They are also food for snakes, toads, turtles and birds.
Slugs are easy to identify, but not always easy to find. They are basically snails without their protective shells. They are typically less than an inch long and their plump, slimy bodies range in color from light gray to brownish black.
Most slug species overwinter as adults. In the spring or early summer, eggs are laid in moist areas near the soil surface, such as under dead leaves, rocks, mulch or flower pots. Baby slugs hatch when there is plenty of moisture present and begin feeding immediately. They resemble adults but are smaller and lighter gray in color.
Slugs are nocturnal and feed at night when we can’t see them. They prefer cool, dark, moist hiding places during the day. Cool, wet spring conditions are ideal for slugs, resulting in early, serious damage to plants. They destroy young seedlings and chew holes in hosta foliage, leaving them unattractive the entire season. Unfortunately, they don’t die in the middle of the summer when conditions get hot and dry. Slugs bury themselves in the soil or find a moist, well-protected spot where they remain in a state of suspended animation. They secrete a mucous-like cocoon around themselves and wait it out until there is enough rain or moisture to dissolve the mucous and soak the water into their bodies. They can loose as much as 50 percent of their weight during a dry spell and then regain it all after only two hours of re-hydrating. Slug damage is often as serious in late summer as it is in the spring due to renewed soil moisture levels and higher populations.
Slugs secrete a slimy mucous trail as they move across plants and smooth objects. This prevents them from drying out and provides a protective track on which they glide across sharp surfaces. It can be seen as a silvery trail on leaves.
Several integrated pest management strategies can be used to control slugs.
Mechanical Control. Traps are a mechanical form of slug control. Trap boards or moist newspaper or carpet samples, about a square foot in size, can be placed around plants where slugs have been feeding. After a couple of days, check the underside of the traps and remove and destroy the slugs that have gathered there to hide. Inverted melon rinds set on the soil will also attract slugs but may make your garden look like a waste site or compost pile.
Slugs are also attracted to beer, so it is often used to trap slugs. A beer trap consists of a shallow container, such as a yogurt cup, buried to within a half inch of the rim and filled with beer. Slugs will find it irresistible, crawl in and drown. You may want to put a loose cover over the beer trap to shade it and prevent rain from diluting it.
Some gardeners get great satisfaction from stalking slugs early in the morning, sprinkling salt on unsuspecting slugs and then watching them shrivel up as the salt removes water from their bodies. This rather sadistic method is neither an efficient nor effective control method.
Based on the 6/5/2006 article by Linda Naeve
Program Specialist, Iowa State University Extension
No comments:
Post a Comment