Lehmannis Slugs
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SLUGS AND SNAILS
Lehmannia Slugs
DESCRIPTION
Adult - Lehmannia poirieri is a light brown to yellowish gray slug with dark lines along the
top of the body. There is a pair of faint grooves just above the foot. The mantle does not have a
groove or fold although it is faintly concentrically wrinkled. When irritated, the mucus secreted is
colorless. This slug grows to about 60 mm long and can stretch to about 75 mm.
The tree slug, Lehmannia marginata (Muller), is a gray to reddish slug with a lighter median stripe
down the back. It usually has a large, translucent water reservoir (body) at the tail. The respiratory
pore is behind the middle of the mantle, and the body is keeled only at tail. The mantle is 1/3 of
the body length just behind the head. Each side has two dark bands lengthwise (lower band
sometimes forming a network, and often faint). The mantle has three dark, lengthwise bands
(median faint) and the pale areas between the bands forming a lyre shape. The sole is gray, often
with a darker median area. The mucus is colorless and watery.
Egg - The eggs of the tree slug are oval to somewhat pointed on one end. The eggs tend to be
opaque when first laid and become more transparent as the embryo develops. The surface of the
eggs is covered by tiny wavy wrinkles. The size of the eggs may vary from one slug to the next
although the eggs in one clutch (up to 63 eggs per clutch) are fairly uniform (2 to 2.5 mm).
Young - No description found.
Fig 143 Lehmannia slug. Lehmannia poirieri (Mabille)(= Limax marginatus of Pilsbry); tree slug, Lehmannia marginatus (O. M. Muller) (= Limax arborum Bouchard-Chantereaux), Limacidae, STYLOMMATOPHORA
BIOLOGY
Distribution - There is some confusion in the literature about the identity of Lehmannia poirieri. In
the American literature this slug was at one time called Limax marginatus. There is now an old
world slug called Lehmannia marginatus (Muller), the tree slug, which is apparently similar to if
not the same species as Lehmannia poirieri. However, the tree is an arboreal slug in Europe
whereas Lehmannia poirieri seems to be terrestrial in the United States. It is thought that
Lehmannia poirieri was introduced from Europe and now occurs throughout the United States
where it tends to occur around dwellings, greenhouses, and gardens. In Europe, the tree slug
inhabits woodlands and damp rocks on open hillsides. The tree slug is found in England, Europe,
Australia, Japan, Mexico, and Venezuela.
Host Plants - Lehmannia poirieri feeds readily on living plant material and has been associated with
damage to pepper plants, carnation, ivy, vinca, and Cymbidium. Tree slugs feed on hosta,
vegetables, wheat, jimson weed, and usually prefer vegetable diet to casein or blood meal. In the
greenhouse it feeds on amaryllis, asters, mums, orchids, and Tradescantia.
Damage - Aside from the direct damage Lehmannia poirieri does to bedding plants and
vegetables, this slug (or a very closely related species) has been found to be an intermediate host of
a parasitic nematode of rats. Slugs have been implicated as intermediate hosts of the fowl
tapeworm, Davainea proglottina (for this reason it is suggested slugs not be eaten raw). The tree
slug can transmit tobacco mosaic virus.
Life History - Lehmannia slugs require a higher moisture substrate than other limacid slugs.
Lehmannia poirieri also tends to burrow into soft soil. During the day this slug tends to rest under
boards, logs, flats, and other debris. Lehmannia slugs space themselves so they do not touch in the
daytime resting sites in summer, but cluster tightly during the winter. Lehmannia slugs have an
elaborate courtship behavior which lasts from a half to 2 hours. Eggs are laid sometime later
(perhaps many weeks later). Young slugs hatch from the eggs about 2 weeks later at 68°F. Tree
slugs live 24 to 26 months, and lay 105 to 132 eggs. This slug searches the edges of strange
environments and can learn the position of food.
CONTROL
Tree slugs are infected with the sporozoan, Pfeifferinela impudica Leger & Hollande, and with the
ciliates, Colpoda steini Maupas, Tetrahymena limacis (Warren), and Tetrahymena rostrata
(Kahl) that infect this slug during the winter probably from cysts in the soil. The trematode,
Strongylus spp. has been found in eggs of tree slugs. The trombidiid mite, Riccardoella limacum
(Schrank), can considerably reduce a slug population especially in captivity. The mites crawl
rapidly on the surface of the slug and disappear into the respiratory pore when mites are disturbed.
Tree slugs are intermediate in resistance to molluscicides. Tree slugs habituate to the attractiveness
of metaldehyde so that broadcasting of baits tends to give better control than clumps. When
sprayed, these slugs crawl onto each other to avoid the residue. Metaldehyde only gives 35 percent
mortality if the weather is cool and rainy. Moisture does not seem to improve the efficacy of
carbamates for tree slug management. One method of controlling Lehmannia poirieri is removal
of its hiding places. Picking up flats, boards, pots, and debris will force the slugs to crawl
elsewhere for a suitable resting spot. For specific chemical control recommendations, see the
current Cooperative Extension publications on ornamental plant pest management or consult your
county Extension agent.