I have to admit how little I knew about slugs and snails before reading the latest Wild About Gardens guide. The RHS and The Wildlife Trusts have given these incredible creatures a reputation makeover. Discover for yourself these magnificent molluscs and the benefits they bring to our gardens.
For something that is so soft and squidgy, especially when it gets stuck between your bare toes on a summer evening, the garden slug or snail holds much menace for gardeners. Described as a tough-skinned terrestrial mollusc which secretes a film of mucus, it sounds more like a superhero. Marvel may have missed an opportunity when they didn’t create slug man or snail woman.
After all the great gastropods have one super strength muscular foot which means they can cling to solid surfaces and climb walls just like spider man. They also utilise a foot-mounted mucus producer for protection. These super snails have a hard shell, which they retract into like a contortionist for protection and last but not least their blood is a pale blue grey.
With absolute perfect equilibrium between both sexes, slugs and most snails are hermaphrodites, meaning they have both male and female reproductive organs. While most species can self-fertilise, if necessary, two snails mating is a more common sight in gardens.
Among their super powers to help fight against daily garden grime, is their ability to break down anything from plant and leaf litter to mushrooms, dead animals, algae and poo! Leopard slugs are territorial and ward off other species of slug too.