Slugs as Pasture Pests
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.33584/rps.15.2011.3194Abstract
Several invasive European slug species are thriving in New Zealand and have become important pests of many crops. In pasture, they are particularly damaging to white clover during renovation and the problem may be exacerbated by direct drilling. Slug feeding causes both lethal and sublethal damage that reduces clover establishment and thus pasture quality. Much less is known about slug damage to established pastures and the degree to which slugs limit pasture persistence. Established pastures frequently support large slug populations that feed on clover and the application of molluscicides can reduce slug numbers and increase the proportion and yields of clover. Future research on these pests should concentrate on determining damage thresholds, breeding resistant clover varieties and developing agronomic practices that favour natural enemies. In the long term, there is much potential for developing microbiological pesticides that target slugs. Keywords: molluscs, slugs, cloverDownloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Copyright
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License. Rights granted to the New Zealand Grassland Association through this agreement are non-exclusive. You are free to publish the work(s) elsewhere and no ownership is assumed by the NZGA when storing or curating an electronic version of the work(s). The author(s) will receive no monetary return from the Association for the use of material contained in the manuscript. If I am one of several co-authors, I hereby confirm that I am authorized by my co-authors to grant this Licence as their agent on their behalf. For the avoidance of doubt, this includes the rights to supply the article in electronic and online forms and systems.



