Question:
Does salt really kill snails?
anonymous
1970-01-01 00:00:00 UTC
Does salt really kill snails?
Twelve answers:
wiesen
2016-11-02 12:04:31 UTC
A adequate volume of salt will fairly kill your flowers. undergo in innovations, the Romans salted Carthaginian fields throughout the Punic Wars greater advantageous than 2000 years in the past, and in a number of those places nevertheless no longer something grows. yet another technique for keeping flowers is to encompass them with copper tape. The moisture exuding from the snail because it crawls interacts with the band to supply it a ask your self. There are commercial snail tape products accessible.
bonnielona
2008-09-12 13:00:27 UTC
Yepper, this is not a "wives tale", the salt dries the sensitive body of the snail and will kill them. If you have snails, and need to put salt into your tank, be very cautious.
anonymous
2008-09-12 13:24:33 UTC
Yes... its pretty cool.. you should try it. I don't know about saltwater snails though (if you put table salt hmmm). The reaction is called osmosis, the water inside the snails move out from the cells, making the snail bubble up.
Jessie is a Hardy fan
2008-09-12 13:18:49 UTC
Ever get really thirsty after eating something salty?? Because salt absorbs moisture....that is exactly what is would do to the snail, it would dehydrate it and kill it.
?
2013-12-03 21:14:18 UTC
I have been using salt and go out when its dark with a torch and sprinkle salt on them and they die instantly if you go out the next day and check you will find empty shells as soon as salt touches them bubbles come out of them and they disappear like they were hit by acid.
anonymous
2008-09-12 12:53:31 UTC
Yes. The salt removes moisture from the slug by reverse osmosis.
TinyDancer
2008-09-12 12:53:31 UTC
The salt absorbs the water in them, so they shrivel up and cant function.
anonymous
2008-09-12 13:11:33 UTC
Why don't you test it on a garden snail hmm?
Short stuff
2008-09-12 12:51:47 UTC
Yes!
Stan Dalone
2008-09-12 12:58:41 UTC
No, it kills them, if there's enough of it.



What happens is that salt sucks the moisture out of their cells, and they dehydrate to death. We're resistant to that sort of thing because our skins are designed to be a barrier against salt, water, diseases, etc. Slugs and snails don't have that sort of protection. So when they're exposed to something as concentrated as salt crystals, the salt violently pulls moisture out of their cells. Imagine having half the water sucked out of your body all at once, over say a five-minute period. You'd most likely be in agony, but soon you wouldn't feel anything.
anonymous
2008-09-12 12:54:33 UTC
The salt dries them out. with out their slim they die
pokenator777
2008-09-12 12:50:26 UTC
if it doesnt kill them it severely hurts them they get all bubbly


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