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Watch a slug use a thin thread of slime as a slide to reach the ground

In a world first, a slug in Australia has been recorded descending from a fence post to the ground by sliding down a thin thread of slimy mucus
slug
A striped field slug (Lehmannia nyctelia) descending a mucus thread
John Gould & Jose W Valdez

Slugs are generally content to lazily munch garden greens, but one of these lethargic molluscs has recently been spotted taking to the air, descending vertically down a string of slime like a spider dangling from a line of silk.

The discovery represents a new type of locomotion never seen before in slugs.

John Gould, an ecologist at the University of Newcastle in Australia, was conducting fieldwork on frogs on Kooragang Island, New South Wales, when he found a striped field slug (Lehmannia nyctelia) hovering about a metre above the ground.

“At first, I thought I had stumbled upon a spider that was making its way to the ground on a silk thread,” says Gould.

The slug was suspended on a taut slime thread stretched from the top of a fence to some gravel below. Gould watched as the slug glided down about half the thread’s length in only a couple of minutes – fast, for a slug.

[video_player id=”mgsD7Go5″ access_level=”everyone”]

“When John first told me about it, I just didn’t believe it,” says Jose Valdez, a conservation biologist at the German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research in Leipzig and co-author of the new study.

After seeing Gould’s video footage and delving into the scientific literature, it became clear to Valdez that this was a unique observation. Leopard slugs (Limax maximus) will mate while hanging by a rope of thick mucus, says Valdez, but this was “a single slug with a relatively thin mucus [thread], descending towards the ground before it went on its way”.

These mucus slides may be useful for quickly escaping predators like ants or lizards.

“It is possible that descending on a single mucus thread saves both mucus and energy, as it’s such a thin line of material that needs to be produced,” says Gould.

A single observation like this isn’t enough to make generalised claims about the behaviour of an entire population of slugs, says Jann Vendetti at the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County. “But it could inspire more thought about that behaviour or trait and jumpstart research and experimentation,” she says.

Austral Ecology

Topics: animal behaviour