"Salt kills slugs" is a hypothesis, not a topic statement.
the salt kills bacteria that spoils the food
Table salt kills trees and shrubs. Look at the branches of the tree. However far they spread out, is where the roots are. You would put lots of salt on those areas and water it. Make sure the salt disolves. Or, dig a trench in those areas and put salt & water in it.
The water outside the paramecium has a higher salt concentration than the inside of the paramecium. Therefore, due to osmosis, the water inside the paramecium will move to the outside and dry out. It's the same thing happens when you put salt on a slug.
The salt make the environment hypertonic for the plants. More water diffuses out of the root cells than the amount diffusing into the cells.
I actually have tried this in a experiment to see if Salt can kill invasive fungi like Toadstools. While it does kill the fungi by changing the soil properties, it also kills other plants in the affected area. It's basically a double-edged sword if you want to use salt.
"Salt kills slugs" is a hypothesis, not a topic statement.
Iodized salt.
Putting salt on a slug completely dehydrates and kills the slug
Slugs and leeches do not have an outer skin that holds water inside of them. Thus, they require a moist environment to avoid drying out. If you put salt on them, the salt pulls the water out of their cells and kills them.
the answer is no to your question but its fun to put salt on them
The salt leaches the fluids out of the slug, due to osmosis. The slug then dies of dehydration.
salt and lots of it salt and lots of it
Salt will kill slugs because the slugs body is covered in mucus and the salt will dry up the mucus and in a matter of time the slug will die.
Put some salt on them
plants are not slugs
Yes, but not with salt. Salt can kill the plant.
Other salt water slugs.... They are cannibals