Land Snails of Pennsylvania spacer
spacer
spacer spacer
spacer spacer
spacer spacer
spacer Home
spacer Species Lists
spacer Systematic
spacer Alphabetical
spacer Land Snail Ecology
spacer Slug Key
spacer Anatomy
spacer Terminology
spacer References
spacer Links
spacer Contact Us
spacer spacer
spacer

  Development of this
site was funded by the
generous contributions
of Pennsylvanians to
the Wild Resource
Conservation Fund.
spacer
spacer spacer spacer
spacer spacer spacer
spacer spacer spacer
spacer spacer spacer
spacer

Limax maximus Linne, 1758

spacer
     
 
Limax maximus Linné, 1758
Ron Lutz II

Limax maximus Linné, 1758
giant gardenslug

Family Limacidae
Order Stylommatophora

The introduced giant gardenslug grows up to 20cm long (Kerney and Cameron, 1979). It has a mantle, the organ that builds the shells of shelled snails, covering the anterior portion of its dorsum (back). In this slug the mantle actually encloses a small vestigial shell. While the mantle is darkly spotted or marbled, the slug’s posterior has two or three dark longitudinal stripes. Its upper color varies from brownish green to gray, and its sole (underside) is whitish. Its slime is sticky and colorless, and its penis, which might be observed during mating, is pale blue. It is native to Europe.

This giant non-native slug prowls gardens, sidewalks, or old homesites in the woods, generally at night. It is a voracious herbivore, but also feeds upon other slugs. Its most amazing feat may be aerial mating, in which a pair of slugs mates while suspending themselves from a mucus strand attached to a tree branch or other object. An early record of this animal in the Eastern US is 1904 in Saratoga County, New York (NYSM).

Ken Hotopp, Tim Pearce 9/30/05

 
     
spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer
spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer
spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer
Carnegie Museum of Natural History spacer spacer

Home | Systematic Species List | Alphabetical Species List | Anatomy
Ecology | Terminology | References | Links | Contact Us

© Carnegie Museum of Natural History

spacer
spacer spacer spacer spacer spacer