Gardeners are being warned over one type of slug which is common in British gardens over the winter.
While most gardeners battle the pesky plant chewers all year round, in wet and rainy autumn and winters slugs and snails focus on breeding and laying eggs for next year to ensure they come back strong next spring when you try to plant things again.
But the BBC’s Countryfile says there’s one type of slug which you will see a lot at this time of year which you should leave well alone
Leopard slugs, so named for their unusual spotted markings, are not interested in living leaves and instead will chow down on dead plant matter which litters gardens at this time of year. Their diet consists of fungi, dead plans and even dead animals like birds and mice.
What’s more, leopard slugs are the mafia of the slug world, hunting down, killing and eating other slugs too.
It means that leopard slugs are your beneficial garden cleaners, tidying up around your raised beds, in greenhouses and on lawns.
This can even help stop the spread of diseases that pass from dead plants or animals to your healthy crops.
BBC Countryfile says: “If you spot a leopard slug in your garden, don’t despair as this species is not regarded as a plant pest. The preferred diet of the leopard slug is fungi, dead plant or animal matter making it a useful species to have around.
“Easily recognisable with its leopard-like spots, the species can grow up to 16cm and is commonly found in parkland, woodland and gardens.”
This is backed by the Game & Wildlife Conservation Trust, which says: “These guys don’t do much damage to living plants, as they eat mainly dead and rotting vegetation along with fungi, which helps recycle nutrients and fertilise the soil. But the really cool thing about leopard slugs is that they are omnivorous and will hunt down other slugs, overwhelming them with a top speed of 6 in/min.”