TY - JOUR
T1 - Slug (Mollusca: Agriolimacidae, Arionidae) ecology and management in no-till field crops, with an emphasis on the mid-Atlantic region
AU - Douglas, Margaret R.
AU - Tooker, John F.
N1 - Funding Information:
Thanks to Ron Hammond (Ohio State University), Joanne Whalen (University of Delaware), Robert Byers (retired from USDA-ARS), H. Grant Troop (formerly of Penn State Cooperative Extension), and three anonymous reviewers for constructive comments that improved the quality of the manuscript. Funding for our slug research has come from the Pennsylvania Soybean Promotion Board, the Maryland Grain Utilization Board, and the Northeast Region of the USDA's Sustainable Agriculture Research and Education Program.
Funding Information:
Thanks to Ron Hammond (Ohio State University), Joanne Whalen (University of Delaware), Robert Byers (retired from USDA-ARS), H. Grant Troop (formerly of Penn State Cooperative Extension), and three anonymous reviewers for constructive comments that improved the quality of the manuscript. Funding for our slug research has come from the Pennsylvania Soybean Promotion Board, the Maryland Grain Utilization Board, and the Northeast Region of the USDA’s Sustainable Agriculture Research and Education Program.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 Entomological Society of America.
PY - 2012/3/1
Y1 - 2012/3/1
N2 - As acreage of row crops managed with conservation tillage increases, more growers are encountering slugs, elevating their importance as crop pests. Slugs can eat virtually all crops and they inflict most of their damage during crop establishment and early growth in the spring and fall. This damage tends to be most severe under cool, wet conditions, which slow crop growth and favor slug activity. These mollusks are particularly troublesome within the Chesapeake Bay watershed where conservation tillage is strongly encouraged to minimize agricultural run-off into waterways that lead to the Bay. Slugs are challenging to control because of the limited number of management tactics that are available. We consider the species of slugs that are commonly found in mid-Atlantic field crop production and discuss their natural history, ecology, and some of the factors limiting their populations. We conclude with cultural, biological, and chemical management options, particularly for corn production, and suggest elements of a potential integrated management program for slugs.
AB - As acreage of row crops managed with conservation tillage increases, more growers are encountering slugs, elevating their importance as crop pests. Slugs can eat virtually all crops and they inflict most of their damage during crop establishment and early growth in the spring and fall. This damage tends to be most severe under cool, wet conditions, which slow crop growth and favor slug activity. These mollusks are particularly troublesome within the Chesapeake Bay watershed where conservation tillage is strongly encouraged to minimize agricultural run-off into waterways that lead to the Bay. Slugs are challenging to control because of the limited number of management tactics that are available. We consider the species of slugs that are commonly found in mid-Atlantic field crop production and discuss their natural history, ecology, and some of the factors limiting their populations. We conclude with cultural, biological, and chemical management options, particularly for corn production, and suggest elements of a potential integrated management program for slugs.
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U2 - 10.1603/IPM11023
DO - 10.1603/IPM11023
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85027142573
SN - 2155-7470
VL - 3
JO - Journal of Integrated Pest Management
JF - Journal of Integrated Pest Management
IS - 1
ER -