Leighton Photography & Imaging

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Pacific Banana Slug

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Working alongside mushrooms and other fungi, banana slugs are detritivores that help turn decaying matter into soil humus. They eat leaves, dead plant materials, moss, fungi, and animal droppings and help in the movement of nutrients throughout the forest and prefer mushrooms over other foods, much to the detriment of human mushroom foragers. Because slugs do not have teeth, food is broken down using its ribbon-like radula, which works like a millstone to grind food into smaller and smaller particles that are then ingested. This one was found in a disturbed suburban park in Kent, Washington.

Copyright
©2015
Image Size
6000x4000 / 15.8MB
Keywords
America, Animalia, Ariolimacidae, Ariolimacinae, Ariolimax, Ariolimax californicus, Ariolimax columbianus, Ariolimax dolichophallus, Arionoidea, Eupulmonata, Euthyneura, Gastropoda, Heterobranchia, Kent, King County, Mill Creek, Mollusca, PNW, Pacific Banana Slug, Pacific NW, Pacific Northwest, Panpulmonata, Sigmurethra, Stylommatophora, USA, United States, Washington, animal, banana slug, biology, brown, bug, close, close up, closeup, cochlea, crawling, creature, creep, creepy, critter, detail, dirty, fauna, forest, gastropod, gross, head, icky, invertebrate, land slug, mollusc, mollusk, mottled, natural, nature, organism, sliding, slime, slimy, slow, slug, sluggish, snail, spots, spotted, wild, wildlife, winter, woods
Contained in galleries
Snails & Mollusks
Working alongside mushrooms and other fungi, banana slugs are detritivores that help turn decaying matter into soil humus. They eat leaves, dead plant materials, moss, fungi, and animal droppings and help in the movement of nutrients throughout the forest and prefer mushrooms over other foods, much to the detriment of human mushroom foragers. Because slugs do not have teeth, food is broken down using its ribbon-like radula, which works like a millstone to grind food into smaller and smaller particles that are then ingested. This one was found in a disturbed suburban park in Kent, Washington.