1. Daily activity rhythm and use of shelter in the slugs Deroceras reticulation and Arion distinctus under laboratory conditions
- Author
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O. Lorvelec, F. Jacky, and G. Hommay
- Subjects
biology ,Deroceras reticulatum ,Methiocarb ,Slug ,Deroceras ,Ecology ,Activity rhythms ,Zoology ,Crop (anatomy) ,Arion distinctus ,biology.organism_classification ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Agronomy and Crop Science - Abstract
Summary Daily activity of slugs, Deroceras reticulatum and Arion distinctus, was studied in the laboratory in relation to the presence of shelters so as to define optimal conditions for using traps to forecast crop damage. Under constant temperature and humidity, activity of slugs began with the lights off. Its arrest occurred after a period of activity with the lights on. Slugs rested most frequently under a shelter on bare earth and rarely used the same shelter for more than two consecutive days. When food was placed under the shelter, the number of slugs found under the shelter was more constant throughout the 24 h period, but lower during diurnal rest. The presence of 4% methiocarb pellets under the shelter led to an increased occupation by slugs, due to the poisoning of some of them. Acts of aggression were more numerous in A. distinctus than in D. reticulatum. In D. reticulatum the smallest slug was the least aggressive and suffered more attacks from the other slugs. In A. distinctus the numbers of attacks suffered or provoked varied little with the size of the slug, but the smallest slug showed less interactions with other slugs.
- Published
- 1998
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