By destroying entire vegetable beds, slugs drive amateur gardeners crazy. According to experts, the current situation is particularly worrying.
It’s been a much-discussed topic in hobby gardening forums for weeks: Plants that have been grown with great effort are eaten down to the stump by slugs overnight.
It is said that there are an incredible number of them this year – an impression that experts confirm. “Yes, it is bad this year,” confirmed Michael Schrödl from the Munich State Zoological Collection (ZSM).
“After the drought years from 2018 to 2022, in which populations plummeted, we now have the second very wet year in a row,” explained Markus Pfenninger from the Senckenberg Biodiversity and Climate Research Center in Frankfurt.
The populations had already recovered last year and were able to start from an already high level this year. The mild winter certainly didn’t hurt either – “but according to our observations, only extremely cold winters have a really lasting negative influence.”
When the lettuce disappears and glittering ribbons of slime stretch across the beds, it was probably her at work: the Spanish slug. Technical name Arion vulgaris, also called large slug.
It occurs in many places – but only very sporadically in Spain, of all places, as researchers have found out in recent years. Contrary to what has long been assumed, it was probably not introduced from the Iberian Peninsula through fruit and vegetable imports after the Second World War – so the name is misleading.
Rather, the species has probably lived for a very long time, at least in southwest Germany. Since the 1960s it has appeared increasingly and further north and east, often in high densities. Unfortunately for gardeners, they are real super snails: the brownish-reddish animals can climb excellently and raised beds are no problem for them, as Michael Schrödl once explained.
Even a high-hanging vessel doesn’t stop them: they rope themselves down the mucous thread. They can smell salad and vegetables from dozens of meters away.
Dry lawns and gravelly paths may be a problem for other native slugs, but not for Arion vulgaris. According to experts, it reproduces faster, eats more and, if necessary, sits in the blazing sun to eat without being harmed.
In addition, genetic analyzes show that it mixes heavily with other species – and in this way may always acquire new characteristics that are favorable for the respective environment. And as if all that wasn’t enough: apart from Indian runner ducks, there are hardly any predators interested in an adult Arion vulgaris.
Some ground beetles can also eat young slugs or their eggs.
Some hobby gardeners currently say in forums that they collect dozens to hundreds of slugs every day. According to Pfenninger, part of the problem is with some probability that there are fewer and fewer animals that eat young snails, such as hedgehogs and toads. “Arion vulgaris is a beneficiary of the wasteland in the gardens,” as Schrödl said.
One measure against slugs is based on their preference for beer – the animals generally like the smell of fermentation, which indicates potential food: the beer trap. However, according to experts, the seductively scented “drinking hall” attracts snails from all over the area – only a small number of them drown, the rest increase their numbers to eat.
It is therefore recommended to only water in the morning, to surround beds with border strips made of sand or snail fences and to regularly turn potential egg-laying sites such as boards lying on the ground in the sun to dry out. Or, for people who can: “A quick cut in the front third kills the snails immediately,” as Schrödl explained.
“Apparently coffee grounds help because caffeine is a neurotoxin for snails,” said Pfenninger. Collecting them is also considered a way to contain the population – but under no circumstances should the snails end up in the forest or elsewhere in nature, where they threaten to displace native species. Urban dog meadows, on the other hand, are a good place, according to Schrödl: “The slugs eat the feces.”
This is generally a factor that is quickly forgotten: Arion vulgaris may be very annoying, but it is also very useful in the garden because droppings and carcasses are removed and composting processes are stimulated.
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