Leopard slug

Limax maximus

''Limax maximus'' , known by the common names great grey slug and leopard slug, is a species of slug in the family Limacidae, the keeled slugs. It is among the largest keeled slugs, ''Limax cinereoniger'' being the largest.

''Limax maximus'' is the type species of the genus ''Limax''. The adult slug measures 10-20 cm in length and is generally a light greyish or grey-brown with darker spots and blotches, although the coloration and exact patterning of the body of this slug species is quite variable.

This species has a very unusual and distinctive mating method, where the pair of slugs use a thick thread of mucus to hang suspended in the air from a tree branch or other structure.

Although native to Europe, this species has been accidentally introduced to many other parts of the world.
Leopard slug ( Limax Maximus ) Found this one living in a composting bin. Lots of food for it in there. Australia,Geotagged,Leopard slug,Limax maximus,Spring

Appearance

The body length of the adult is 10-20 cm .

The greater part of the body is rounded, but there is a short keel on its tail, with about 48 longitudinal rows of elongate, detached tubercles.
The body color is pale-grey, ash-colored, brownish or sometimes yellowish-white. The body is longitudinally streaked or spotted with black. The pattern of spotting is variable. The shield is always black-spotted. The sole of the foot is a uniform ash or yellowish-ash color. The foot-fringe is pale, with a row of minute submarginal blackish tubercles.



The tentacles are very long and slender. The reproductive pore is near the base of the right upper tentacle>

The shield is oblong, about one-third of the total length of the animal. The shield is rounded in front, angular behind, and forming an angle of about 80 degrees when in motion, usually of a similar tint to the body, but boldly marbled or maculate with black, somewhat concentrically and interruptedly ridged around a sub-posterior nucleus.

The pneumostome is just posterior to the midpoint of the mantle, as it is in all Limacidae.

The mucus is colorless and iridescent, and not very adhesive.

Although color varieties have no actual taxonomic significance, a large number of color varieties have been described, prominent among them being the varieties ''serpentinus'', ''vulgaris'', ''cellarius'' , ''johnstoni'', ''maculatus'', ''ferrussaci'', ''obscurus'', ''fasciatus'' and ''rufescens'', of Alfred Moquin-Tandon, and ''cornaliee'', of Pini.The shell of ''Limax maximus'' is reduced and internal, under the shield. The occurrence of this internal shell was known to Pliny the Elder; the shell was used by the ancient physicians for the sake of its carbonate of lime

The calcitic shell is situated beneath the hinder part of the shield, and is perceptible through the skin. The color of the shell is whitish. The shape of the shell is oblong-oval and thin, slightly convex above, and correspondingly concave beneath, with a membranous margin. The apex or nucleus is at the posterior margin but inclined towards the left side, and forming the apophysis by which the shell is organically attached to the animal. The length of the shell is 13 mm and the width of the shell is 7 mm . Shells of different Limacidae species are undiagnostic: in other words, they are not helpful for identification purpose.

Digestive system: The formula of the radula is: 62-73/ × 138-157. The intestine has six convolutions and is without a caecum. Of the six convolutions of the intestine, four are imbedded in the liver, and two hang freely in the body cavity.

The nervous system is composed of the typical ganglia. The pedal ganglia are placed beneath the radula sac and joined together by an anterior and a posterior commissure. The abdominal ganglion lies a little to the right of the median line. The visceral ganglia occupy the angle between the lingual sheath and the oesophagus and the buccal ganglia are widely separated but joined together by a commissure nearly as thick as the ganglia themselves.

Reproductive system: The hermaphrodite gland is elongated and large, and is connected with spermoviduct by means of the hermaphrodite duct which takes its course through a portion of the albumen gland . The spermoviduct is thick and well convoluted, and separates further down into a vas deferens or sperm-duct and an oviduct . The former opens into the upper end of a very long penis , to which a strong retractor muscle is attached. The lower portion of the penis unites with that of the oviduct at the genital orifice, so that there is no vestibule. The receptaculum seminis opens into the lower end of the penis near the junction of the two ducts.
Leopard Slug on Grass A beautiful example of this very attractive slug, interestingly known as the Tiger Slug in Germany Baden-Würtemburg,Geotagged,Germany,Leopard slug,Limax maximus,Ravensburg,Summer

Distribution

The internal shells of the different species of Limacidae are not recognizable to the species level. Therefore, the fossil distribution of ''Limax maximus'' is unknown. Unidentified calcitic shells of Limacidae are known from European Tertiary and Quaternary deposits.This species is widely distributed, but it is generally considered to be native to Europe and parts of western Africa, and perhaps parts of the Mediterranean.

Within Europe, this species occurs in many areas, including:
⤷  Great Britain - ''Limax maximus'' was first described England in ''Animalium Angliae Tres Tractatus … Alter de Cochleis tum Terrestribus tum Fluviatilibus'' by Martin Lister in 1678. The presence of ''Limax maximus'' in England had been noted twelve years earlier in Christopher Merret's ''Pinax Rerum Naturalium Britannicarum''.
⤷  Ireland
⤷  Benelux: Belgium, Netherlands, Luxembourg
⤷  France
⤷  Switzerland
⤷  Bulgaria
⤷  ScandinaviaThe non-indigenous distribution of ''Limax maximus'' includes:

⤷ Central Europe: Czech Republic, Poland, Slovakia, Hungary, Germany, Austria
⤷ Northern Europe - Scandinavia: Norway, Sweden
⤷ Eastern Europe: Latvia, Lithuania, Belarus, Ukraine

This slug species has been introduced to North America. It occurs along the East and the West Coasts of the continent.

Its introduction into the United States was first announced by George Washington Tryon in 1867, when it was discovered in cellars in Philadelphia. Within a few years its presence was noticed at Newport, Rhode Island, Brooklyn, and Pittsburgh, and it is now common in many areas, including:

⤷ East Coast states
⤷ South Central United States
⤷ Midwest
⤷ West Coast states, including California since 1896, and Montana

It can be found in some parts of Canada. In 2012 it was found in south-central Ontario and western Newfoundland. Other non-indigenous distribution areas include Madeira, southern Africa, Australia, including Tasmania, New Zealand, Chile, and southern Brazil.
European import slug...  Geotagged,Leopard slug,Limax maximus,Summer,United States

Behavior

''Limax maximus'' is nocturnal, feeding at night. It is not very active or prolific. When alarmed, or at rest, this slug merely draws its head within the shield, but does not otherwise contract its body. When irritated, it is said to expand its shield.

The homing faculty is strongly developed in this species, which, after its nocturnal rambles or foraging expeditions, usually returns to the particular crevice or chink in which it has established itself.

''Limax maximus'' is capable of associative learning, specifically classical conditioning, because it is capable of aversion learning and other types of learning. It can also detect deficiencies in a nutritionally incomplete diet if the essential amino acid methionine is experimentally removed from its food.The eggs of this slug are deposited in a cluster, slightly attached to each other. Eggs are transparent, elastic and slightly yellowish in color. The size of the egg is 6×4.5 mm. They hatch in about a month.

The tiny slugs which emerge from the eggs need at least two years to reach sexual maturity.

The lifespan of ''Limax maximus'' is 2.5–3 years.
Leopard slug hanging by slime thread It was a bit of a shock finding this hanging on the inside of the door towards our garden. This large Leopard slug was hanging by a slime thread of about a meter long, and it was crawling down, producing large amounts of slime to extend its thread. Kind of like a very slow spiderman (top speed is 6 inches per minute, but only when in a hurry).

Reading a bit more about the species, it is actually almost always near human settlement, so it is not that surprising to find it. Heesch,Leopard slug,Limax maximus,Macro

Habitat

The slug is almost always found near human habitation — usually in lawns, gardens, cellars or in other damp areas.

This species is not gregarious. It frequents gardens, damp and shady hedgerows and woods, hiding during the day beneath stones, under fallen trees, or other obscure and damp places. It does however exhibit a decided preference for the vicinity of human habitations, and readily takes up its abode in damp cellars or outbuildings.

In Ireland, this predilection for human dwellings is not exhibited, and the species is restricted to woods and other similar places. It may even be met with almost within high-water mark on the seashore.
Leopard Slug - Limax maximus I'm not 100% sure of this ID, but don't know what else this monster slug could be.  It was at least 10 cm long.

Habitat: slugging around on a tree in a campground Fall,Geotagged,Leopard slug,Limax maximus,United States,limax,slug

Food

''Limax maximus'' is omnivorous. It is a detrivore, cleaning up dead plants and fungi, and a carnivore known to pursue other slugs at a top speed of 6 inches per minute. It also eats young crops faster than they can grow and so is listed as a major agricultural pest by state departments of agriculture in the US from Florida to Oregon.
Leopard slug closeup Highlighting their odd eyes. The key challenge for these slugs is not dying during the winter, since their body is 90% water.  Leopard slug,Limax maximus

Evolution

The internal shells of the different species of Limacidae are not recognizable to the species level. Therefore, the fossil distribution of ''Limax maximus'' is unknown. Unidentified calcitic shells of Limacidae are known from European Tertiary and Quaternary deposits.

References:

Some text fragments are auto parsed from Wikipedia.

Status: Unknown
EX EW CR EN VU NT LC
Taxonomy
KingdomAnimalia
DivisionMollusca
ClassGastropoda
OrderPulmonata
FamilyLimacidae
GenusLimax
Species