Mark Henderson
The Times
SLUGS, the bane of every gardenerís life, devouring carefully nurtured seedlings and the precious buds of flowers, are under threat: death by latte or espresso.
Coffee, that powerful stimulant that jolts human beings from sluggishness
to being wide awake first thing in the morning, appears to have the reverse
effect on molluscs. Give the
voracious army a shot of caffeine during its onward march through your
herbaceous border and the chances are you will put it to sleep forever.
Scientists have discovered that slugs and snails cannot stand caffeine.
Research in the United States has shown that the stimulant is lethal to
the pests and repels them even at
concentrations lower than those found in a cup of watery American coffee.
The findings, by the US Department of Agriculture (USDA), suggest that
brewing a pot of coffee and spraying it on the garden could offer a safe
and environmentally friendly means of
controlling the pests that eat up to five times their bodyweight in
plants every day.
Unlike slug pellets, which are made from highly toxic metaldehyde or
methiocarb, caffeine is generally accepted as safe for human consumption,
and it is also unlikely to affect beneficial
insects.
The horticultural side effects of throwing espresso on the garden, however,
are less certain. Trials have shown that caffeine solutions do not damage
plants such as palms, orchids,
Dracaena and anthuriums, but that they can cause leaf yellowing in
ferns, bromeliads and lettuce.
In the long term, scientists are investigating polymers that could be
mixed with caffeine in a commercial slug spray, which would stop it from
causing any harm to garden plants. At
present, however, it is impossible to say whether strong or weak coffee
is less likely to damage plants.
The slug-repellent properties of caffeine were discovered by chance, during a study at the USDAís Agricultural Research Service in Hilo, Hawaii.
A research team led by Robert Hollingsworth was field-testing caffeine
as a potential means of controlling a frog pest, and noticed that large
slugs were dying when the stimulant was
sprayed.
To confirm the effect, they wetted the soil of potted plants infested
with a type of slug called Veronicella cubensis with a 2 per cent caffeine
solution. After 3* hours, 75 per cent of the
slugs had left the soil, while after 48 hours, all the slugs had slithered
away and 92 per cent had died.
Further tests on orchids infested with the snail Zonitoides arboreus
found that a 2 per cent caffeine solution killed 95 per cent of the molluscs,
and that a 1 per cent solution killed 60 per
cent. At much lower concentrations ó of the sort found in a cup of
coffee ó caffeine still works well as a repellent, according to the study,
details of which are published today in the
journal Nature.
Dr Hollingsworthís team dipped leaves of Napa cabbage in solutions at
0.01 per cent, 0.1 per cent, 0.5 per cent and 2 per cent, and found that
slugs were much less likely to eat the leaves
at every value.
When slugs were given no alternative to eating leaves sprayed with caffeine,
they ate between 9 and 39 per cent less cabbage, according to the strength
of the solution. When given a
choice between treated and untreated leaves, their consumption of sprayed
cabbage fell by between 11 and 77 per cent. A typical cup of instant coffee
contains 0.05 per cent caffeine ó
more than enough to have a significant repellent effect.
Filter or cafetiere coffee contains a little more, while espresso coffees
have the highest caffeine content. ìWe have discovered that solutions of
caffeine are effective in killing or repelling
slugs and snails when applied to foliage or the growing medium of plants,î
Dr Hollingsworth said.
ìBecause caffeine is a natural product and is classified by the US Food
and Drug Administration as a ëgenerally recognised as safeí compound, it
has potential as an environmentally
acceptable alternative toxicant for control of slugs and snails.î The
mechanism by which caffeine kills slugs and snails is unknown, but the
researchers suggested it is a powerful
neurotoxin that disables the molluscsí nervous systems. Slugs sprayed
directly with caffeine respond with ìunco-ordinate writhingî, they found.
The average garden is estimated to have more than 30,000 slugs and snails.
Each can live for up to ten years, and lay 3,000 eggs in its lifetime.
The creatures have been named as ìpest of
the yearî by the Royal Horticultural Society. So the solution is simple:
just give them a cup of coffee and they will never eat lunch in your garden
again.
Five other ways to defeat the pests
Pellets: Effective poison, usually metaldehyde or methiocarb. Pellets
should be scattered around plants. Blue colour and bittering agents are
meant to deter other animals and birds from
eating them and being poisoned. Not for the green gardener
Salt: Sprinkling salt on slugs kills them by dehydration, absorbing
water and making them shrivel up. Extremely difficult method of control
on a large scale, however. Not for the
squeamish
Beer traps: Margarine tubs set into the ground and filled with a little
beer attract the slugs, which cannot get out once they fall in. They can
then be collected and killed, with the
comforting thought that they died happily
Predators and parasites: Natural slug parasites such as nematode worms
can be introduced to the garden. Some gardeners bring in hedgehogs, which
eat slugs, to control numbers.
You also get a happy hedgehog in the garden
Midnight patrols: The simplest but most time-consuming method ó picking
them up by hand and dropping them in a bucket. What you do next is between
your conscience and your
neighbouring gardener
Nos remerciments à The Times et Mark Henderson