A scientist from the University of Exeter helps a the large garden to solve puzzles - do snails have Navi
Dr Dave Hodgson, with Totnes based works at the University School of Biosciences (Cornwall Campus) Brooks amateur scientist Ruth? if worm a homing instinct have to learn.
under this they run a great national experiment, and hope, offer that people across the country to participate.
Snails are wild herbivores and can havoc in gardens, munching their way through price produce and cause do much damage.
This leads some green-fingers enthusiasts grab all the necessary resources in order to. bay
Many try to deal humanely with the problem by collecting the snails and they move to another area, but the question is - they go easy on the same place? If so, how far would you have to get them before they can not find their way back to your greens?
Ms Brooks this question forward to BBC Radio 4 Material World program as part of their "So You Want a function". Scientists who want to find the BBC Amateur Scientist of the Year
Your question was one of four took a full-blown science research project of more than a thousand entries. , Dr. Hodgson was prepared by the University of Exeter in her mentor through the inquiry process be
He said: "This is a fantastic project, because this is a real problem for gardeners across the country - how to stop snails of everything you eat grow? Ruth question could help find a humane way of dealing with the.
"My job is to help science to monitor and it is great, so far is because we get a lot of people involved and to show them how to work the scientific process. It is not all about lab coats and mathematics, it can be much more accessible and fun. The more people, the better to participate. "
The next major step in the project is the" Big Snail Swap keep 'experiment that is to obtain the participation of the people across the UK.
It asks people to mate Helix aspersa (or garden) to swap snails from their home gardens, it marks seen previously how many screw back to its original patch at the end.
participants take then. far apart are the two gardens and the obstacles between them
Ms Brooks said asked to transmit their data, including information about how: "I have always wanted to know whether the snails that only decimate my plants come back when I am moving, and if they do, what is their homing distance? How far I would move them, so they do not come back?
"We hope that the evidence from this project will we find a fascinating insight into the behavior of snails, as well as help us a way for gardeners with problems to deal they represent. "
Anyone in the large screw swap to engage in www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/snails the BBC Radio 4 website go to read more about how to start the experiment.
Tagged with: in the garden • big snail swap • snail • snails
Filed under: bugs control • gardening • home and garden • News • pesticides
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