Johnboy wrote:Hi Galatea,
Wildlife do not hoover up the pellets. The pellets are more resilient to rain than you are suggesting and there is nothing in an organic slug pellet to harm a pet or any wild life should they manage to eat some.
Try treating a 5 acre plot with Nematodes and the net cost would be that it would be cheaper to pack up growing and go to the local town and buy all your produce.
JB.
Hi Johnboy,
Funilly enough I actually
do garden a 5 acre plot, and have found Ferramol's Ferric Phosphate "Organic" pellets to be of little more than very short-term use and then only on specific plants. Although they are long-lasting when used under cover in tunnels, the greenhouse etc., outdoors I've found their weather resistance to be poor - generally about a week at the very most in wet weather (which is actually consistent with their own product description which states: " If it remains damp then replacement pellets may be required 7 days later") - which doesn't economically or practically compare very well with a season-long barrier.
If I was to treat the entire garden with pellets through a wet period like last summer then I would be using industrial quantities of Ferrous Phosphate, on a weekly basis which I'm not prepared to do. I personally find the barrier approach to be more practical, cheaper, and much more durable as a first line of defence. That's just my experience in my garden of course, and yours no doubt may be different.
I did not suggest that wildlife "hoover up the pellets" but rather that they might, and indeed do, eat the dead and dying snails in particular - as I have witnessed Thrushes doing, for instance, and here's a quote from a thread on a recent wildlife forum:
"I have just contacted the Hedgehog Preservation Society as I made rather a disturbing discovery. I found that one of our visiting hedgehogs had been eating slug pellets. In fact it had eaten so many, that the little poos were totally turqoise and crumbly."
If you look at the regulatory testing data then you'll find that almost all of the normal pesticide testing requirements for Ferrous Phosphate slug pellets were waived based on the ubiquity of Iron in the environment, even though quite small quantities of Iron can cause acute toxicity, liver failure and indeed death in humans and other mammals.
To quote a Cornell University study:
"The lethal dose of iron for a 2 year old child is 3 g, and just 1 g leads to severe poisoning over a period of a few hours."
Ferrous Phosphate is used as a human Iron supplement specifically because it does break down into iron relatively quickly when digested.
No studies have even been carried out on the long-term effects of ingestion of Ferrous Phosphate by birds or any other wildlife (aside from worms) for that matter. The study using earthworms, incidentally, concluded that neither Metaldehyde or Iron Phosphate affected
earthworm feeding, growth or mortality.
Of course, environmentally speaking, Ferrous Phosphate is a massive improvement on Metaldehyde based pellets, and is indeed based on a naturally occurring substance (hence it's "Organic" status) but to my mind there is no one size fits all approach to this, or many other aspects of gardening. Pellets will work well for some gardeners, barriers for some, traps and nematodes for others. I was simply trying to suggest that there are lots of different options to consider and I find it quite surprising that you are so resistant to that idea.