[NatureNS] re great grey? slug love? -- location of sighting? etc.

Date: Sat, 04 Aug 2007 17:33:09 -0300
From: Jim Wolford <jimwolford@eastlink.ca>
To: NatureNS <naturens@chebucto.ns.ca>
Cc: Andrew Hebda <HEBDAAJ@gov.ns.ca>,
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I would like to know where Jen's sighting was, and whether she thinks they
were indeed great grey slugs.  I remember tracking down a report of these in
the Cambridge or Coldbrook area west of Kentville, and at the time reading
that this very large and distinctive alien slug was also known from Halifax
but not many or any other areas of the province, as of perhaps 20 years ago?

Perhaps we can get an update from Andrew Hebda, or Chris Majka, or ideally
from Derek Davis, who has done a lot of work on documenting land snails and
slugs for Nova Scotia?

Cheers from Jim in Wolfville
----------
From: jen cooper <iffercooper@hotmail.com>
Reply-To: naturens@chebucto.ns.ca
Date: Thu, 02 Aug 2007 22:13:36 +0000
To: naturens@chebucto.ns.ca
Subject: RE: [NatureNS] slug love?

very, very cool. thank you for such a great, in depth response! i suppose
not many can say they've seen that. it was quite beautiful.

:) jen

>From: "Wild Flora" <herself@wildflora.com>
>Reply-To: naturens@chebucto.ns.ca
>To: <naturens@chebucto.ns.ca>
>Subject: RE: [NatureNS] slug love?
>Date: Thu, 2 Aug 2007 17:42:51 -0300
>
>Thank you, Jen, for giving the the opportunity to quote the following.
>(We'll see if it gets past the censors.):
>
>According to the Western Society of Malacologists "Field Guide to the Slug"
>(Sasquatch Books),
>
>"Although slugs are hermaphroditic, each animal equipped with both male and
>female reproductive organs, they mate with themselves only if no other
>slugs
>are around. ... The actual exchange of sperm is preceded by an elaborate
>courtship ritual, which supposedly reduces the chances of two individuals
>of
>separate species mating and giving rise to hybrids.
>
>"During courtship, two slugs will circle each other, often for hours, with
>both partners engaged in ritualized bouts of lunging, nipping, and
>sideswiping with their tails. The two slugs may also display their
>disproportionately large sex organs. ...
>
>"'The sight of a courting pair of slugs majestically circling one another
>and ceremoniously rasping each other's flanks while they solemnly wave
>their
>enormous penises overhead puts the most improbably athletic couples of
>Pompeii and Khajuraho into a more appropriate and severely diminished
>perspective,' note researchers C. David Rollo and William G. Wellington.
>'Athletic' is an even more appropriate adjective for great gray garden
>slugs, which are able to copulate in midair, suspended by stretchy strands
>of mucus up to 17 3/4 (45 cm) long."
>
>In short, it seems likely that you caught a couple of great gray garden
>slugs in flagrante dilecto. What you saw hanging from them was probably
>their swollen genital areas. It wouldn't have been egg, as these are laid
>later, in a more conventional (i.e., chicken-like) fashion, or babies as
>the
>eggs don't hatch for several weeks, if not longer.
>
>The great gray garden slug, Limax maximus, is from Eurasia but apparently
>is
>not considered a pest species as it eats mainly decaying material. It's
>fairly recognizable because it has leopardlike spots or on the mantle,
>often
>with a striped body. Photo at http://www.hiltonpond.org/ThisWeek000608.html
>
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: naturens-owner@chebucto.ns.ca [mailto:naturens-owner@chebucto.ns.ca]
>On Behalf Of jen cooper
>Sent: Thursday, August 02, 2007 10:36 AM
>To: naturens@chebucto.ns.ca
>Subject: [NatureNS] slug love?
>
>last night i found two slugs hanging on a mucous thread from the side of my
>house. they were entwined  in a really beautiful spiral. there was
>something
>
>hanging from them. it came from each of them and looked like it originated
>behind their heads. but it was dark and i didnt want to disturb them too
>much so i'm really not sure... it was fleshy and also wrapped in a spiral
>around the other. i would guess that this was iether sex organs or perhaps
>little baby slugs? they looked sluggy but where smaller and whitish and so
>entwined that i could not pick out any characteristics like antenae or
>anything.
>
>when i went back later to check on them one slug was on the step below and
>the other was on the mucous thread, i imagine eating it. there were no
>fleshy bits present then. does anyone have any idea what i witnessed? any
>slug love experts?
>
>:) jen
>
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