Slugs are not pests. They are quiet architects of life. While you crush them underfoot or poison them in your garden, they are feeding the very soil that feeds you, and offering science a treasure we barely understand. Because inside their mucus, in that glistening trail we despise, hides a powe… Continues…
Beyond their reputation as garden villains, slugs are relentless recyclers, turning dead leaves, fungi, and organic waste into fertile soil. Each slow glide helps transform decay into nourishment, quietly sustaining forests, gardens, and crops. At the same time, they are prey for birds, toads, hedgehogs, and beetles, stitching themselves into the fragile fabric of the food chain. Remove them, and you tug at threads you cannot see.
Their mucus, once only a symbol of disgust, is now a source of fascination for researchers. It adheres without tearing delicate tissue, inspires new medical glues, and offers moisturizing, regenerating properties coveted by the cosmetics industry. What we once wiped away in revulsion may soon protect wounds, heal skin, and inspire new biomaterials. In learning to value slugs, we are forced to admit how little we truly understand about the lives beneath our feet.