Latest slug control tactics available

COMMON PEST: The black keeled slug has been known to be the most common slug found in areas where rainfall reaches above 450mm.

INCREASED slug damage has been reported by grain growers in Victoria, South Australia and southern New South Wales after ongoing wet conditions.

Some areas have experienced this pest for the first time.

Slug expert Dr Michael Nash said wet conditions last spring had extended the slug breeding period resulting in higher numbers this season.

“This follows a run of dry years in some areas that aren’t used to seeing slugs as a threat,“ Mr Nash said.

“For example, reports from the Liverpool Plains (NSW) and the Wimmera (VIC), growers have been caught off guard” Dr Nash said.

To help growers manage the impact of slugs this season, the Grains Research and Development Corporation (GRDC) has updated a Slug Control Factsheet to assist with identifying, monitoring and controlling pest numbers to reduce crop losses.

The GRDC will also be delivering a series of slug management workshops through August and September.

Mr Nash said growers who hadn’t anticipated slugs and proactively implemented control measures, could have experienced high slug numbers damaging crops, and have had to resow.

“Crops are at their most vulnerable to slugs as seedlings, so growers need to protect the crop until it establishes, usually in the first four to eight weeks depending on ground temperatures,” he said.

“Slugs emerge from the ground over an extended period of time, so growers need to have bait protecting seedlings during establishment, which means they may need multiple applications of bait.”

Mr Nash said an integrated pest management approach was the most effective way to protect crops from slugs.

He added that no single method provides complete control, so growers needed to use an integrated approach.

“This needs to include paddock monitoring, weather monitoring to identify risk, maintaining natural enemies and implementing cultural practices, such as establishing crops quickly to avoid emerging slugs, rolling immediately after sowing, then baiting as needed,” he said.

To help growers understand how to better predict slug issues and implement integrated management strategies on-farm, the GRDC is hosting slug workshops across South Australia, Victoria and Tasmania through August and September.

The workshops’ details are as follows:

– Rutherglen – August 16, 8.30am-1pm

– Lower EP, Yallunda Flat – August 24, 7.30-10.30am

– Gippsland – August 30, 7.30-10.30am

– Rochester – September 1, 7.30-10.30am

– Inverleigh – September 5, 7.30-10.30am

– Derrinallum – September 6, 7.30-10.30am

– Tabor – September 7, 7.30-10.30am

– Naracoorte – September 8, 7.30-10.30am

– Millicent – September 9, 7.30-10.30am

Hagley – 21 September, 7.30-10.30am

Campbell Town – 23 September, 7.30-10.30am