Dusky Slug in Michigan

Arion subfuscus

Dusky slug

The Dusky Slug (Arion subfuscus) is a European slug that is now established in Michigan. I found it on the edge of the National Guard Reservation near Grayling, Michigan. I’m not sure how it found its way this relatively remote area.

Arion subfuscus

Dusky slug

The Dusky Slug recently was split into two species. The other species is Arion fuscus.   They are distinguished by molecular data and internal characters. I did not want to dissect a slug so I must be content with identifying my slug as part of the A. subfucus complex.

Dusky Slug is one of the round back slugs in the family Ariondea. They differ from the keel back slugs in the family Limacidae by their rounded backs, smaller size, and lack of an internal shell. Unlike the keel back slugs they can roll up if threatened. The respiratory opening of a rounded back is toward the middle or the front of the mantle shield and on the keel back slugs it is at the rear of the shield. (See Leopard Slug post.)

Dusky Slugs eat a wide variety of foods but mostly they consume fungi and decaying plant material. They also eat insect larva, algae, and plants. The one I photographed was feeding on Common Milkweed (Asclepias syriaca).

Arion subfuscus

Dusky slug

I am often surprised the things I see in the natural world. I was not aware of non-native slugs and now I have seen two species. Get out into nature and look. You never know what you will find.

Copyright 2014 by Donald Drife

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Leopard Slug in Michigan

 Limax maximus

Leopard Slug

Giant Slug or Leopard Slug (Limax maximus) is a European species now found in North America and Australia. It is in the family Limacidae which is comprised of the keel back slugs. Keel back slugs are longer and thinner than the round back slugs that make up the family Arionidae. Keel back slugs also possess an internal shell under their mantle shield. The mantle shield is the section of the slug closest to their “head.” On the slug’s right side is their respiratory opening.

 Limax maximus

Slug anatomy

 Limax maximus

Front of Leopard Slug

I found Leopard Slugs at the Royal Oak Arboretum behind the Senior Center in Royal Oak, Michigan. They come out when it is getting dark and are active throughout the night. They are 10-15cm (4-6 inches) long. Eating mainly fungus, dead vegetation, and other slugs they are not normally garden pests unless the population is large. I was surprised at how fast they moved. I timed one crossing a 1.5m (6 foot) path in 15 seconds.

 Limax maximus

Leopard Slug at full stretch

For more information on this slug and other gastropods check out Robert Nordsieck’s great website The Living World of Molluscs. The Leopard Slugs are here.

Copyright 2014 by Donald Drife

Webpage Michigan Nature Guy
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