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The '''Pacific Banana Slug''' ('''Ariolimax columbianus''') is a species of slug found on the Pacific coast of North America.<ref name=adw/> It is the second-largest species of terrestrial [[slug]] in the world, growing up to 25
Slug (Ariolimax columbianus)”. The American Midland Naturalist. Vol. 140. Is. 1. Pp.
103-110.
</ref>
== Description ==
The Pacific Banana Slug can grow up to 25 centimeters long, making it the second largest terrestrial slug in the world.<ref name="adw" /> It is often bright yellow, but it can also be greenish, brown, tan, or white. The Pacific Banana Slug commonly also has black spots covering the tail, sometimes so extensively that the tail may appear completely black. Individual slugs can also change color from changes in their environment and eating habits, and can also indicate if a slug is healthy or injured.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Harper|first=Alice Bryant|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/18937538|title=The banana slug : a close look at a giant forest slug of western North America|date=1988|publisher=Bay Leaves Press|others=Daniel Harper|isbn=0-9621218-0-0|location=Aptos, Calif.|oclc=18937538}}</ref>
==Distribution==
The Pacific
{{Gallery
|Ariolimax columbianus 0511.JPG|Mantle, note the prominent [[pneumostome]]
|Tail End of a White Pacific Banana Slug on Kaien Island.png|Tail, note full length [[Slug#Description|foot fringe and keel]]. This individual appears to lack melanin, possibly displaying [[albinism]].
|Pacific Banana Slug.jpg|A Pacific Banana Slug whose [[Slug#Description|tail]] appears to be nearly entirely black.}}
==References==
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