The banana slug (genus Ariolimax) is a truly fine citizen of America's western seaboard. It is the second largest species of air-breathing terrestrial gastropod in the world, capable of growing up to a foot long, weighing in at anything up to four ounces (that's 30cm and 115 grams to you newbies) for a mature specimen, and it can live for seven years if it's lucky and doesn't get eaten by the natives.
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the magnificent banana slug |
That list might sound definitive, but the situation is slightly more complicated. What I've described are the default colour settings for the five varieties, but all banana slugs are capable of modifying their colour to an extent, in response to variations in diet, light exposure and moisture levels.
All banana slugs are detritivores, and as such they are vital to the local ecosystem. Their habitat is the forest floor where they happily consume leaves, animal droppings, moss and decaying plant material which they recycle as nitrogen-rich soil humus. The splendid little chaps are thought to have been munching away there since the Pleistocene period some two million years ago.
I sense you're keen to know more, so. here is a handy pictorial guide, followed by some words of enlightenment.
Moving from right to left, at the front end are two sets of retractable tentacles. The longer upper pair are used to detect light and movement, the short lower pair detect chemicals. If a slug loses a tentacle for any reason, it simply grows a new one.
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today we have naming of parts |
Immediately behind the lower tentacles is the radula, the slug's feeding apparatus, a ribbon-like structure covered in rows of microscopic teeth for biting or cutting material before it disappears into the oesophagus.
Up top like a helmet is the mantle, providing a level of protection to the vital components of a slug's anatomy. There is a single lung with an external opening or pore, the pneumostome, through which the slug breathes.
There is a gonopore, where the sexy stuff happens. Slugs are hermaphrodites, possessing both male and female productive organs, allowing them to mate as either sex - or even to fertilise themselves if they happen to be too far from a suitable partner when the urge takes them, though they are capable of travelling at six inches (15 cm) a minute. An impregnated slug will lay anything between ten and fifty eggs in some handy forest floor crevice, but from that moment the incipient offspring are entirely on their own.
The anus, set surprisingly far forward on the gastropod's structure, is where all that splendid processed waste gets excreted to enrich the forest floor. Maybe that's why the giant sequoias of California's redwood forests can grow to over two hundred feet tall!
Of course slugs are invertebrates. They have no skeleton, no spine. Most of the rest of the body is what is termed the foot with its skirt, the muscular and very flexible section housing the guts for which all gastropods (literally stomach-foot from the Greek) are named
And no description would be complete without a mention of slime. It's what slugs are most noted for, that silvery mucus trail they leave in their wake. But slime is actually brilliantly clever stuff. Technically, it's neither liquid nor solid, but a liquid crystal substance. Upon contact with external moisture, this substance is capable of absorbing up to one hundred times its volume in water, resulting in a mucous secretion that works in several ways. It coats the banana slug in a protective barrier against dehydration and harmful pathogens and gives it a beautiful, glossy sheen. It allows the slug to glide gracefully and painlessly across the forest floor. It contains pheromones to alert and attract mates. And it contains chemicals that can numb the tongues of interested predators. (Never lick one!)
All in all, I'd say the banana slug is quite the package, and I would contend its a much more attractive and useful animal than many would give it credit for. I believe Californians are rather proud of their State slug (providing it stays outside in nature where it belongs).
And so to a new poem on topic. It's a bit of a fantastical piece and comes with the caveat that this may not be the final version. Based loosely on a rather despicable true event, in which a friend of a friend tried sprinkling slugs in their living-room with cocaine rather than salt, I give you...
Slugs Drugs
On
the scene - damp Oxbourne Hall
deep in Thatcher's heartless reign,
squat (illegal occupation, not this
stately pile) of principals Terry &
Julie, with Waterloo sunset in their
eyes, both hoping to make it big in
something music or stagewise and
pro tem living on daddy's handouts.
the plan - typical desultory night
of whining, wine and drugs in the
great hall (ha ha not so great these
days with mildewed walls and that
library of wise words mottling on)
with no logs for the fireplace and
only candles for warmth. A shared
space with slugs, lots of them, who
love the moist conditions, sliming
across ancestral floors at will. So
bored out of their anaesthetised
brains, Terry & Julie decide they'll
experiment, round a few specimens
up with sugar tongs, chalk a magick
pentagon on the black coffee table
and sprinkle their glossy victims
with cocaine. Get them out of
their heads, says T. Send them
to a happy sparkly death says J.
the slugs - writhe in a tangled
suppurating mass, scream way
above the human audible range,
have blinding cosmic visions,
go burning to sluggy hell.
Terry & Julie stare for a
brief while but won't
bother to clean
up the mess,
don't even
think it was
cruel or a
waste of
drugs and
hate the
very thought
of tomorrow.
Thanks for reading, S ;-)
3 comments:
Yes, shocking by Trump and Vance. How about Thugs On Drugs? (power and ketamine for instance). You make an excellent case for the banana slug Steve and then the poem was clever and shocking.
A foot-long slug and you want us to like them? 😱
Sometimes you shock in unexpected ways and writing about giant bright yellow slugs is one. I know you've done your best to make them sound useful and charming, but really, eugh! Well done with the poem though, first class.
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