Photo: Robin Rosetta, Oregon State University |
The earthworms and slugs in the study didn’t actually come
mouth-to-mouth…or whatever the correct anatomical analogy is to the human
equivalent of face-to-face. “Instead, the mere presence of earthworms reduced
the number of leaves damaged due to slugs by 60%,” according to Kumar and the
study by Zaller et al titled “Herbivory of an
invasive slug is affected by earthworms and the composition of plant
communities.”
The study, published in the journal BMC Ecology, also found that higher plant diversity decreases the
likelihood of leaf damage from voracious slugs. Research results noted that
slugs ate even less—40% less—when earthworms were present in the higher plant
diversity test.
Dr. Johann Zaller, who led the research, explained the
outcome of the study this way: "Our results suggest that two processes
might be going on. Firstly, earthworms improved the plant's ability to protect
itself against slugs perhaps through the build-up of nitrogen-containing toxic
compounds [that slugs may find less palatable]. Secondly, even though these
slugs are generalists they prefer widely available food and in high diverse
ecosystems slugs eat less in total because they have to switch their diets more
often since plants of the same species are less available."
Encouraging earthworm populations to protect against slugs
and planting a diverse mix of plants probably isn’t enough to keep slugs at bay
or even under control in the wet Pacific Northwest. But it certainly gives us
another good reason to nurture earthworm populations!
Other studies have shown that metaldehyde (Meta®) does not
harm earthworm populations whereas other slug bait formulations may cause harm. Snail
and slug baits that contain Meta® active ingredient
include That’s It™, Bug-Getta® and One and Done®, which can be found at home
improvement and home and garden centers throughout the Pacific Northwest.
I have found that in an artichoke plant, for example, heavy slug & aphid feeding abruptly slows when I give the plant nitrogen. Now I see why!
ReplyDeleteInteresting. I'll have to try nitrogen on my kale when the aphids start their attack. Thanks for the tip!
ReplyDelete