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         Slugs:     more books (100)
  1. Slugs and Snails (Creepy Crawlers Discovery Library) by Lynn M. Stone, 1995-07
  2. A Slug of Hot Lead (Avalon Western) by Earl G. Fisher, 2002-08
  3. My Sister's a Sea Slug by Gretel Killeen, 2003
  4. Pug, Slug, and Doug the Thug (Picture Books) by Carol Saller, Vicki Jo Redenbaugh, 1993-12
  5. Pug, Slug, and Doug the Thug (Picture Books) by Carol Saller, Vicki Jo Redenbaugh, 1993-12
  6. ¡Alimañas y bichos horribles y asquerosos! (Yukky, Mucky Slugs and Bugs! Spanish Edition) by Gill Davies, 2003-02
  7. Discovering Slugs and Snails (Discovering Nature) by Jennifer Coldry, 1987-10
  8. Slugs and Snails (Wonder World) by Colin Walker, 1993-02
  9. Slugs for Breakfast by Nicola Moon, Ailie Busby, 2004-10-01
  10. Why slug a postman by Seldon Truss, 1951
  11. There Is a Slug in My Mug: Bk.2(4-5) by Clive Gifford, 2004-04-01
  12. A Check-list of the Slugs by Theodore Dru Alison Cockerell, Walter Edward Collinge, 2009-11-17
  13. Snails and Slugs (Keeping Minibeasts) by Chris Henwood, 2003-06-12
  14. Yukky, Mucky Slugs and Bugs (Interactive) by Gillian Davies, 1999-05-01

81. Molluscan Pictures Books Slugs (mollusks Mollusk Molluscs Mollusc Snails)
Books slugs Search in this page ONLY slugs - David Greenberg; Paperback;Terrestrial slugs Biology, Ecology and Control - A. South; Hardcover;
http://www.molluscan.com/books/slugs.shtml
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  • Slugs - David Greenberg; Paperback
  • Terrestrial Slugs : Biology, Ecology and Control - A. South; Hardcover
  • - Rhonda Massingham Hart; Paperback
    Usually ships in 24 hours
    Rhonda Massingham Hart / Paperback / Published 1991 Price: $10.36 ~ You Save: $2.59 (20%) Read more about this title...
    Down in the Sea : The Sea Slug Ships in 2-3 days
    Price: $13.45 ~ You Save: $1.50 (10%) Read more about this title...
    Field Guide to the Slug : Explore the Secret World of Slugs and Their Kin -In Forest, Fields, and Gardens from Southeast Alaska to California) Ships in 2-3 days
    Western Society of Malacologists, David G. Gordon / Paperback / Published 1994 Price: $5.56 ~ You Save: $1.39 (20%) Read more about this title...
    National Geographic / VHS Tape / Published 1998 Price: $11.01 ~ You Save: $1.94 (15%)
  • 82. SLUGS
    WHAT EATS THEM? Small mammals, snakes, amphibians, some birds, carnivorousbeetles, other slugs, and humans. The Connoisseurs of slugs.
    http://www.bug-guy.com/slugs.htm
    SLUGS Bugaboo Pest Control LLC D o it y ourself ... nt Invasion! Have A Pet? Can't use Spray? Take a look at the ProZap hanging insect guard. A safer way to protect your pet from Fleas Ticks and Mite infestations in animal and cages. Easy to use, just hang on outside of cage and it begins working . Good for up to three months. Round the clock protection. Click here to buy one at paypal for just $ TECHNICAL INFO: KINGDOM: Animalia PHYLUM: Mollusca CLASS: Gastropoda SUBCLASS: Pulmonata ORDER: Stylommatophora SUBORDER: Sigmurethra FAMILIES: Testacellidae, Urocyclidae, Parmacellidae, Milacidae, LimacidAe, Trigonochlamydidae, Boettgeritlidae, Arionidae, Philomycidae HOW BIG? : One-half inch (13 mm) to ten inches (25.4 cm), depending on species. HOW LONG DO THEY LIVE?: One to six years, depending on species. WHAT DO THEY EAT?: Whatever the forest and field have to offer: fungi, lichens, green plants, worms, centipedes, certain insects, animal feces, carrion, other slugs. WHAT EATS THEM?: Small mammals, snakes, amphibians, some birds, carnivorous beetles, other slugs, and humans.

    83. SLUGS (St. Louis Underground Gamers Society)
    slugs (St. Louis Underground Gamers Society). This is the home to slugs. (the St.Louis Underground Gamers Society). Yes, it's REALLY our VERY OWN domain name!
    http://www.larp.us/
    SLUGS (St. Louis Underground Gamers Society)
    This is the home to SLUGS.
    (the St. Louis Underground Gamers Society) Yes, it's REALLY our VERY OWN domain name! WWW.SLUGS.US. This site is solely about the activities surrounding SLUGS. We have updated the FAQ again as well as several other pages on Feb 3rd, 2003. Please go to the links at your left and peruse the info. If something looks amiss please let me know. We would like to thank EVERYONE for participating in our LARP at StormieCon! We need your help though. Somehow during the breakdown of the convention we misplaced our email list that we took from everyone. Please email us with your contact info by clicking here. The next SLUGS event will be at ShowMeCon 1 . This will be a non-LARP event but it will be fun nevertheless.
    Our next LARP event will be at Archon 27 . October 2-5, 2003. Most of us will also be at DieCon 3. Alas we are not running a LARP at this convention but we will be there to game with all of you and party hard. The areas defined on the Navigation bar to the left contain: Who - Information on the staff and some regular players What - An explanation of Live Action Role Playing and our rules Where - A list of Conventions that we have staged events at When - A schedule of where we will be staging games and having meetings Why - Past games, motivations, and miscellaneous items.

    84. Creative Loafing: Slugs For The Snitches: Jul 29 - Aug 4, 2000
    Shopping. slugs for the snitches Or how my friends got in trouble with the wrongcrowd in a Yuppifying neighborhood BY HOLLIS GILLESPIE 07/29/00. Scott Martin.
    http://www.atlanta.creativeloafing.com/2000-07-29/cover.html

    CLN HOME

    NEWSSTAND

    REELTIME

    MUSIC MANIC
    ...
    Shopping

    Slugs for the snitches
    Or how my friends got in trouble with the wrong crowd in a Yuppifying neighborhood
    BY HOLLIS GILLESPIE
    Scott Martin Honnie Goode peers through a window that she says her neighbor shot out. Even before all this happened, I told my neighbor Honnie Goode that if a bullet ever came through my window I'd be out of here faster than my feet could carry me. And even then I assumed the bullet would have been by accident, that somebody would have shot at someone else and my window just got in the way. "I swear," I said to Honnie, "I'd be gone. You'd see my legs spinning underneath me like a cartoon character." I don't remember what Honnie said next, but I wish I did because in the end a bullet didn't go through my window ... it went through hers. And it was no accident. Someone stood on the sidewalk in front of her house, aimed a gun at her living room window and pulled the trigger. Three times. The bullets ripped through the curtains and chipped the tile on one of the fireplaces inside the home Honnie shares with her husband, Todd Kitchens, and her mother, Bren Goode. "They didn't make much noise when they came through," says Bren of the bullets. "You'd think it would be louder than that."

    85. Effective Control Of Slugs And Snails - Introduction
    Some gardeners consider slugs and snails to be beneficial becausethey feed on crop pests such as caterpillars and aphids. When
    http://www.slugs-and-snails.ca/
    Effective Control of
    Slugs and Snails
    Home Description Lifecycle Prevention ... Health Canada Introduction Some gardeners consider slugs and snails to be beneficial because they feed on crop pests such as caterpillars and aphids. When slugs and snails invade vegetable or herb gardens, however, they can cause major damage, consuming up to forty percent of their weight. Slugs and snails attack seedlings, roots, tubers and young plants, leaving large jagged holes and sticky deposits mainly on the leaves of herbs and garden vegetables. Important Notices This website has been published by the Pest Management Regulatory Agency to provide homeowners and consumers with a relevant and useful resource regarding household pest management. It is intended as an informational guide only.

    86. CollegeSports.com - Men's Volleyball
    Men's Volleyball Squashes Banana slugs 30 UCSB men's volleyball sweepsUC Santa Cruz in three games. Feb. The slugs drop to 2-10 for 2003.
    http://www.collegesports.com/sports/m-volley/stories/021103aac.html

    Game Audio

    Live Stats

    NewsWire

    Message Boards
    ...
    Feedback

    Other Sports
    Cross Country

    Equestrian

    Fencing

    Field Hockey
    ... Wrestling Men's Volleyball Squashes Banana Slugs 3-0 UCSB men's volleyball sweeps UC Santa Cruz in three games. Pick Your School The ACC Air Force Akron Arizona Arizona St. Army Baylor Big 12 Boston College Bowling Green Butler California Central Michigan Charlotte Clemson Cleveland St. Colorado Creighton Denver Duquesne Fairfield Florida Atlantic Florida State Fresno State George Washington Georgia Gonzaga Houston Illinois Illinois Chicago Iowa State Jacksonville Johns Hopkins Kansas State Kentucky Lafayette Louisville Loyola Marymount Maryland Massachusetts Memphis Miami (FL) Michigan State MSU Photo Shop Missouri Ole Miss Mount St. Mary's Nevada North Carolina NC State Northern Colorado Northwestern Notre Dame Oklahoma Oklahoma State Old Dominion Oregon Oregon State Pac 10 Pennsylvania Portland State Providence Purdue Quinnipiac Richmond Sacred Heart Saint Louis Saint Mary's Samford San Diego State Santa Clara Siena South Carolina SE Missouri St Southern Illinois Stephen F. Austin

    87. SLUGS And SNAILS - NATURAL PEST MANAGEMENT
    © FRANCES MICHAELS. If overnight newly planted seedlings are disappearing and thereare large holes in your plants, the culprits are probably snails or slugs.
    http://www.greenharvest.com.au/pestcontrol/slug_snail.htm
    Return to Garden Pests Page Printable Version ORGANIC SLUG AND SNAIL CONTROL © FRANCES MICHAELS If overnight newly planted seedlings are disappearing and there are large holes in your plants, the culprits are probably snails or slugs. Usually a close look at the plants will reveal the characteristic silvery trail. Snails and slugs are molluscs and need a moist environment to survive. They avoid the sun and come out mainly at night or on dark, cloudy days. They secrete mucous to move about and by using the same trail and sharing trails with other snails they save on mucous production. During cold or dry weather, snails can seal their shells, and remain dormant for several years. Australia has 6,000 species of native snails, none of which cause problems to garden plants. Some of our native species are carnivorous, feeding on garden snails. The common brown snail Helix aspera is an unwanted arrival from Europe. It can take from 4 months to 2 years to mature and may live 12 years. Snails are hermaphrodite and during the warmer months can lay several egg clusters. The clusters contain up to 100 white eggs, at a soil depth of 20-40 mm. Effective control of snails and slugs in the long term needs a combination of cultural, biological and chemical methods rather than relying on a single solution.

    88. Of Slugs And Stone Steps; Putters And Poison Ivy
    Of slugs and Stone Steps; Putters and Poison Ivy. Monday, June 11, 2001529 PM. Now I am not at all squeamish and I rather like slugs.
    http://newdiets.com/Putter_Stories/Slugs_Stone_Steps.shtml
    Of Slugs and Stone Steps; Putters and Poison Ivy
    Monday, June 11, 2001 5:29 PM Today I had to lead a La Leche League meeting at my friend Karen's house. I forgot totally about yesterday, although last week I remembered. I was only reminded today thanks to a mother calling me, bright and early, at 7:15 to ask for directions. So I gathered up Paloma, Putter and Mickey, dressed them respectably, rather than in summertime rags, and got them in the car. We stopped at McDonald's for hash browns for Putter and Paloma and coffee for me; Mickey had fallen back asleep (he had had that horror known as the Dreaded Seven P.M. Nap last night and I refuse to admit when he finally fell asleep for the night) so we got him nothing. Then we stopped to vacuum the car because Putter had spilled popcorn from Paloma's softball game on Saturday and I was embarrassed to be seen in public with a car that messy looking inside (I had gone to church with it like that the day before and was resolved to go nowhere else). Putter loves my friend Karen's house. It is over 100 years old and has lots of interesting landscaping and little stone walls and crooked stone steps leading from the driveway to the backyard. Mostly Putter just goes up and down the stone steps in an endless variety of Putter patterns. Karen's house has been a summer meeting location for LLL for years, ever since I have lived here and her first child was a little baby. Her house is fairly small so we usually have the meetings in her beautiful backyard.

    89. Doug And The Slugs - Official Home Page - List Of Songs
    Official Home Page of Doug and the slugs. Information for fans regardingtouring, merchandise and past and present photos. SONG LIST!!
    http://www.geocities.com/SunsetStrip/Cabaret/5544/songlist.html
    SONG LIST!!
    Click on a link below to see the lyrics.....
    Some have song clips, indicated by *.wav
    Any Day Now

    Black Widow

    Carved In Stone

    Chinatown Calculation
    ...
    Cover Me With Roses
    (.wav sample)
    Cover of Love

    Dangerous

    Day by Day

    Drifting Away
    ... Rusty Bus (.wav sample) St. Laurent Summer Same Old Story Say You're Going to Love Me (.wav sample She's Looking At Me Shotgun (.wav sample) Soldier of Fortune Stand Up Take It or Leave It Take my Breath Away ... Terminal City (.wav sample) To be Laughing Tom Cat Prowl Too Bad Victim of Love ... Wrong Kind of Right Still a work in progress! back to main page

    90. Slugs And Snails - The Fawcett Society
    show me yours! get what you want, teacher's stuff, why this site?that hurts! the great loo mystery, get it on, who decides? mind the
    http://www.equalcitizen.org.uk/slugs_and_snails.htm

    91. Slugs
    DO THEY EAT? Whatever the forest and field have to offer fungi, lichens, greenplants, worms, centipedes, certain insects, animal feces, carrion, other slugs
    http://www.greensmiths.com/slugs.htm
    Slugs To Home Page
    KINGDOM: Animalia
    PHYLUM: Mollusca
    CLASS: Gastropoda
    SUBCLASS: Pulmonata
    ORDER: Stylommatophora
    SUBORDER: Sigmurethra
    FAMILIES: Testacellidae, Urocyclidae, Parmacellidae, Milacidae, LimacidAe, Trigonochlamydidae, Boettgeritlidae, Arionidae, Philomycidae
    HOW BIG? : One-half inch (13 mm) to ten inches (25.4 cm), depending on species.
    HOW LONG DO THEY LIVE?: One to six years, depending on species.
    WHAT DO THEY EAT?: Whatever the forest and field have to offer: fungi, lichens, green plants, worms, centipedes, certain insects, animal feces, carrion, other slugs. WHAT EATS THEM?: Small mammals, snakes, amphibians, some birds, carnivorous beetles, other slugs, and humans. HOW DO THEY SPREAD?: Eggs; usually small, less than 1/4, inch (6 mm) in diameter, often with a thick outer shell of calcium carbonate; laid in clutches of 3 to 50, with some species laying as many as 500 eggs per year. Greensmiths / P.O. Box 338 / Frisco, TX 75034 Fax (972)377-4290 email us: greensmiths@greensmiths.com

    92. Syracuse Univ. Linux User Group
    slugs. Syracuse Univ. Linux User Group Web Site.
    http://slugs.syr.edu/
    SLUGS Syracuse Univ. Linux User Group Web Site
    home
    InstallFest. about us events ... minutes Next Meeting:
    TBA
    Next InstallFest:
    Apr. 3
    News
    • InstallFest '02 #1
      Our first InstallFest in this year is scheduled as follows.
      For the details about our InstallFest, please check here
      Date: April 3 (Wed.)
      Time: 6:00pm - 7:00pm
      Place: CST 3-131
      The Postscript file for the flier can be download here The Postscript file for the flier with arrows is here
    • Join our Mailing List!!
      We have our mailing lists running on our own server. Visit Our Mailing List Page
      and check the detail.
    • offers a User Group Program
      The User Group Program which include following benefits:
      • Free review copies of O'Reilly books and software
      • 20% discount on all O'Reilly books, software and conferences
      • Donations of books and other promo items
      • Speaking engagements with O'Reilly authors
      • Announcements about our latest products
      • Links to interesting articles and news
      • Quarterly catalogs
      Check their web site for details.

    93. Doug And The Slugs
    Click on a letter below Doug and The slugs. Entertainment whiz and clown prince, DougBennett, founded Doug The slugs in 1977 with Bosley, Watson, and Burton.
    http://www.canoe.ca/JamMusicPopEncycloPagesD/doug.html
    Inside CANOE.CA SLAM! Sports Jam! Showbiz AllPop CNEWS Webfin Money C-Health Lifewise AUTONET.CA Newsstand Travel Search eBay.ca Get away today 411 online Free E-Mail Shop.canoe.ca CareerConnection Classified Extra Match Contact Obituaries Today Restaurants Hotels Weather Horoscopes Lotteries Crossword Scoreboard News Ticker Biz Ticker Sports Ticker TV Listings Movie Listings CLIVE Concerts Mutual Funds Stocks Feedback Index
    Home

    Biography

    Discography

    Links
    ...
    JAM! Radio

    JAM! Music Movies Television Video Theatre Books Country AllPop Concerts TV Listings Photo Charts Reviews Interviews Database Chat Columnists
    Canoe Google
    Concerns or Feedback?

    E-mail us!

    Last Updated: Tuesday, 12-Nov-02 10:19:57 Click on a letter below
    Doug and The Slugs
    1977 Line-up
  • Doug Bennett (vocals, guitar)
  • John Burton (guitar)
  • Dennis Henderson (bass)
  • Drew Neville (keyboards)
  • Ted Laturnus (drums)
  • John "Wally" Watson (drums; replaced Laturnus) 1978-1988 Line-up
  • Doug Bennett (vocals)
  • John Burton (guitar)
  • Richard Baker (guitar)
  • Steve Bosley (bass)
  • Simon Kendall (keyboards)
  • John "Wally" Watson (drums) 1998 Line-up
  • Doug Bennett (vocals)
  • Marc Gladstone (keyboards, vocals; 1998)
  • 94. Slugs!
    What do slugs have to do with it? For SLG. Once we realized this, wequickly took to calling ourselves the slugs . And now you know!
    http://www.msen.com/~robh/slg/slugs.html
    What do slugs have to do with it?
    For those who came here via our new banner, and are wondering what slugs have to do with our page: Our grove is named Shining Lakes Grove, giving us the acronym SLG. Once we realized this, we quickly took to calling ourselves "the SLuGs". And now you know! Rob Henderson, SLG Webmaster

    95. NBC.com > Fear Factor
    slugs Bile Every so often, a Fear Factor contestant tells us they'll be traumatizedfor life after getting through a particularly horrifying stunt.
    http://www.nbc.com/nbc/Fear_Factor/tales/312_slugs_bile.shtml
    Home TV Schedule MSNBC CNBC ...
    Ostrich Egg

    Every so often, a Fear Factor contestant tells us they'll be traumatized for life after getting through a particularly horrifying stunt. That's exactly how Chandra Meissner felt after downing 10 live slugs and a shot of cow bile…
    FEAR FACTOR: So tell us what it was like downing all those slimy slugs and that shot of cow bile…
    CHANDRA MEISSNER: The first slug that I put in my mouth, I popped it in and I was like, "Oh, my gosh, this is only one and I have nine more to go after this." I hadn't even started chewing it or even swallowing it. I felt it move around in my mouth and that just disgusted me. The slime was just building up and building up. And I found that, after I was popping my fifth one in, the pieces of it would get stuck in the slime that was in my mouth. So I was having a hard time swallowing it. So then I just started doing a different strategy.
    FEAR FACTOR: And what was that different strategy?
    CHANDRA MEISSNER: This is so disgusting: I took two hard bites into it and then I felt the juice come out of the slug. And that was the juice that helped me throw it back in the back of my mouth. I would just push it in the back of my mouth and swallow. But then I got down to the very last one, the big one, and it was like biting into a rubber ball. It was just disgusting and it took forever to chew and get that one down. It was awful.
    FEAR FACTOR: Why did you save the big slug for last?

    96. The Sea Slug Forum - Solar-powered Sea Slugs
    Two quite different groups of sea slugs have evolved ways of using the abilityof plants to convert the sun's energy into sugars and other nutrients.
    http://www.seaslugforum.net/solarpow.htm
    Solar-powered Sea Slugs
    PHOTO: UPPER: The sacoglossan Placida cf. dendritica showing the green network of ducts which contain the green chloroplasts from its algal food.
    LOWER: The aeolid nudibranch Pteraeolidia ianthina which "farms" colonies of brown single-celled algae (zooxanthellae) in its body.
    PHOTOS: Bill Rudman. Two quite different groups of sea slugs have evolved ways of using the ability of plants to convert the sun's energy into sugars and other nutrients. In simple terms they have become "solar powered".
    The herbivorous sacoglossans are suctorial feeders removing the cell sap from the algae on which they feed. In most, the cell contents are simply digested by the slug. Some species however have evolved branches of their gut which ramify throughout the body wall and contain plastids, which are the photosynthesising "factories" from the algae, alive and operating. In many cases these plastids are chloroplasts, but sacoglossans that feed on red and brown algae are also reported to keep the plastids from these algae alive as well. As I show elsewhere in the Forum, one species, Elysia cf furvacauda changes diet and plastid at least three times during its life history.

    97. Royal Horticultural Society - Gardening Advice
    RHS Help Advice. slugs (Many species). Underground parts of plants, especiallypotato tubers and tulip bulbs are tunneled by black keeled slugs (Milax spp.).
    http://www.rhs.org.uk/advice/profiles0700/slugs.asp
    news about us events gardens ... RHS ADVISORY ROADSHOWS
    Slugs (Many species) Symptoms
    Soft succulent growth including seedlings, young tender shoots, leaves and flowers are damaged or eaten, particularly in wet conditions. Underground parts of plants, especially potato tubers and tulip bulbs are tunneled by black keeled slugs ( Milax spp.). Slime trails may be visible. See also Snails Cause
    Slugs (various Arion, Milax and Deroceras species) can cause damage throughout the year but are particularly troublesome in the spring. Warmer weather combined with damp conditions greatly increases their activity. They vary in size and colour, which ranges from yellowish grey through shades of brown to black. Non-chemical control
    A biological control specific to slugs, with no adverse effect on other types of animal, is available in the form of a microscopic nematode or eelwom watered into the soil. The nematode ( Phasmarhabditis hermaphrodita ) enters slugs' bodies and releases bacteria that cause a fatal disease. A moist soil and soil temperatures of 5-20

    98. Christoph Högger - Antagonists Of Slugs And Snails
    Antagonists of slugs and Snails. Asteraki EJ, 1993, The potential of carabid beetlesto control slugs in grass/clover swards, Entomophaga 38(2) p. 193198.
    http://www.mysunrise.ch/users/choegger/Slugs/Antagonists.html
    Antagonists of Slugs and Snails
    A Bibliography of Sources and a List of Citations grouped according to Taxon of the Antagonists
    chhoegger@gmx.net Sources: Author(s) Year Title Publisher Location / Pages Asteraki EJ The potential of carabid beetles to control slugs in grass/clover swards Entomophaga 38(2) p. 193-198. Carabid beetles recorded feeding on slugs in arable fields using ELISA BCPC Symp Proc No.66: 411 Baronio P Gli insetti nemici dei molluschi Gasteropodi Boll. Entom. Bologna 22: 169-187 Bogon K. Natur Verlag Augsburg 404 p Digweed SC Selection of terrestrial gastropod prey by cychrine and pterostichrine carabid beetles The Canadian entomologist 125(3) p. 463-472 Weichtiere Mosaik Verlag Stuttgart 279 p Godan D Ulmer Stuttgart, 467 p Grzimkek B Grzimeks Tierleben Bd. I, Niedere Tiere dtv Jaworska M Laboratory infection of slugs (Gastropoda: Pulmonata) with entomopathogenic nematodes (Rhabditida: Nematoda) Journal of invertebrate pathology 61(2) p. 223-224.; Mead AR Pulmonates Vol. 2B Economic Malacology with particular reference to Achatina fulica Academic Press London 440 p Muthumani et al.

    99. IPM: Insect Information: Slugs
    . slugs are mollusks, related to oysters and clams....... No. 48 slugs. Damage Management Habitat Modification Barriers andTraps Baits
    http://www.ipm.uiuc.edu/publications/infosheets/48-slugs/slugs.html
    NSECT
    NFORMATION
    IPM Home Field
    Crops
    Urban ... Search IPM
    No. 48 - Slugs
    Damage Management Habitat Modification Barriers and Traps ... Baits
    Description
    Slugs are mollusks, related to oysters and clams. Slugs are referred to a "naked snails," as they possess no shell. Slugs lay clusters of translucent, pearly-shaped eggs under debris or buried beneath the soil surface. They can lay between 20 to 100 eggs several times per year, taking approximately two years for slugs to reach maturity. The gray garden slug Peroceras reticulatum , is the slug generally encountered in Illinois. It is approximately 3/4 to 1-1/2 inches long, ranging in color from pale yellow, lavender, to purple. In addition, they are covered with black or brown spots and mottling. Less commonly encountered is the great gray garden slug Limax maximus . It is up to 7 inches long and is yellow-gray to brown with black mottling. Click on image for larger version
    Figure 1.

    100. DIY Article
    DIY Gardening and Landscaping Episode DIG114 slugs and Snailsslugs and Snails From Battle of the Bugs Episode DIG-114,
    http://www.diynet.com/DIY/article/0,2058,1283,00.html
    Home Categories Automotive Home Improvement
    Project Index
    Newsletter ... Episode DIG-114 Slugs and Snails
    From " Battle of the Bugs " Episode DIG-114
    Figure A
    Figure B
    To make a beer trap, remove the cap portion of a 2-liter bottle, invert the severed top in the bottom, and fill the bottom section with beer.
    Slugs and snails can do major damage to tender garden plants. They usually feed at night and hide during the daylight hours. Snails and their shell-less relatives, slugs, are mollusks and are related to clams, mussels and oysters. The eggs of slugs and snails look like clusters of 1/8" pearls: if you find them under rocks, boards or pots, destroy them.
    To make it harder for snails and slugs to become established, clean up garden debris, where they like to hide.
    A barrier strip of copper foil will also protect your plants, as snails and slugs are electrocuted when they come into contact with the metal. Be careful when installing copper foil: the edges are sharp ( figure A ). Copper foil costs about $1 a foot at nurseries and garden centers. Copper tape is also available, with adhesive on the back for easy installation. Prevent trailing plants from growing over the copper and creating a bridge for the snails to cross.
    Barriers of diatomaceous earth, made from the calcified bodies of tiny sea creatures (

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