they only survive a short time in the soil as they are limited by the food or breeding sites available (as are all animals- eg follow barn owl populations and they cycle in a similar way). all you are doing by applying the nematodes in vastly increasing the local population, they then do their job but when there is no more food or breeding potential then the numbers crash.
The number of naturally occuring nematodes in the soil will fluctuate around a stable norm, increasing when there are plenty of slugs and decreasing when their population crashes. The nematode population size lags behind the slugs by a few weeks and so that is why you should time your applications to coincide with the boom in slug numbers- the naturally occurring nematodes will peak in numbers some weeks after the slug numbers increase-so you are just pre-empting the boom (although the natural boom will never be that high). the populations of both crash after this and then there is a quiet few weeks as the remaining slugs breed and build up numbers- only for it all to happen again.
anyway i guess you get the idea.
also being cynical they would not sell them if they lasted a long time...or you would not have to go back and buy more...
The number of naturally occuring nematodes in the soil will fluctuate around a stable norm, increasing when there are plenty of slugs and decreasing when their population crashes. The nematode population size lags behind the slugs by a few weeks and so that is why you should time your applications to coincide with the boom in slug numbers- the naturally occurring nematodes will peak in numbers some weeks after the slug numbers increase-so you are just pre-empting the boom (although the natural boom will never be that high). the populations of both crash after this and then there is a quiet few weeks as the remaining slugs breed and build up numbers- only for it all to happen again.
anyway i guess you get the idea.
also being cynical they would not sell them if they lasted a long time...or you would not have to go back and buy more...
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