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February 4, 2012

Good Night, Sleep Tight

Well-nigh every house had bed bugs before the Second World War, which meant that many people were bitten every night and hence the popularity of that rhyme. The Baby Boomers never saw bed bugs when they were children and so were the first generation for 400 years not to suffer from bed bug problems.

Fifty years on and the bed bugs are back and some big cities are in dismal straights because the insecticide that works best on bed bugs, DDT, is banned in most countries in the world. This means that the situation will get worse until researchers come up with something to replace DDT.

So, how would you know if your house has become victim to the spread of this superbug? It is not as simple as you would think, because bed bugs are fairly shy for insects. not only that, but they shun daylight and their dark skins blend into the shadows.

The first thing is to check for bites. The bites are normally a quarter of an inch in diameter, round and pink to red, if they show up, because they do not show up on some people. Similarly, some feel an itch but others do not; some will get a swelling, others will not. Not only that, but some individuals get an immediate reaction and others suffer a deferred reaction.

There is no confusing a bed bug bite with a mosquito bite although it can look like a flea bite. There are often five or six of these bites in a line, nut not necessarily a straight line. If you see these marks at bath time, it is time to check the bed for conclusive proof.

Strip the bed clothes back and look at the sheets and the mattress. It will be easier there because thy are normally light in colour. Look for red and brown smears. The red smears are blood, where the insect has consumed too much and vomitted up a bit and the brown is faeces of digested blood.

If you see those marks, you have got them, so now you have to get rid of them and that is not an easy task. If you rent your place tell the landlord instantly, because he might be liable for eradicating them. If you have funds, call in the exterminators. Otherwise, you have a lot of things to do.

If you may not move out whilst you are debugging the house at least you can clean the bed so that you may get a decent night’s sleep.. Remove the bedding and mattress and steam clean the bed (you can hire a steam cleaner). Then sew up any rents in the mattress and steam clean that.

Put the legs of the bed in small bowls of oil and place the mattress and pillows in bed bug proof mattress covers. Boil the sheets and blankets and replace, but do not let them hang on the floor at night. Put a mosquito net about your bed for further protection.. Then you require advice on cleaning the household.

Owen Jones, the author of this article, writes on numerous subjects, but is at present concerned with Bed Bugs Treatment. If you want to know more, visit our website now at Pest Management at Home.

February 2, 2012

Are Bed Bugs An Environmental Health Hazard?

Bed bugs have almost certainly been pestering people for ever, especially in hotter countries. In fact Aristotle wrote of them in 400 BC, but they were not widespread in the United Kingdom until after the Great Fire of London in 1666.

People believed that bed bugs lived in wood because the bed bug plagues only commenced after 1670. It is believed that the bed bugs that had come in with wood imported to reconstruct London.

And they have been there ever since, with the exception of around fifty years between the 1940’s and 1995. A comparable pattern may be traced in most of the developed Western world, because after the Second World War there was a determined effort to clear out the old bomb-ravaged city ghettos and start again.

As they went through the cities clearing and sanitizing they used tons of DDT which virtually killed off bedbugs and some other common household insects.

The powers that were in the United States also went on the rampage with DDT with a comparable result. Then something happened and we can be fairly precise about the date: in 1995 reports of bedbug infestations started flooding in again.

One area of London reported infestations of bedbugs doubling every year from 1995 to 2001 and the US National Pest Management Agency reported a 71% increase in bedbug incidents between 2000 and 2005. A pest control firm in North Carolina said that 25% of the hotels it surveyed between 2002 and 2006 had a bedbug problem.

Bedbugs feed by inserting two tubes through the host’s skin, one pumps in a sort of saliva containing anticoagulant and anaesthetic and the other sucks blood. This saliva can result in a reaction in individuals in the form of swellings, which may or may not itch. Having lots of bites can cause anaemia.

The biggest danger most people run is secondary issues from scratching with dirty finger nails. In 2008, the World health Organization offered the belief that there was some proof that bedbugs may cause asthma and that being bitten often may make the victim more liable to other illnesses.

Bedbugs have all the right equipment and behavioural patterns to be able to spread diseases, but there have been no known cases to date. However, knowing that there are bedbugs around can cause individuals to be paranoid about them, which often leads to insomnia and tetchiness.

If you find bedbugs in your hotel, you ought to report it to the manager and if you stay in rented accommodation you ought to tell the landlord. If it is your own place you ought to seek advice from the local Environmental Health Agency attached to the council, because bedbugs can spread from one household to the next very fast.

Numerous old terraced houses are not entirely sealed off from one another enabling bedbugs to travel and set up new colonies. Bedbugs can also be transported home from hotels in your suitcase or clothing. Bedbugs are a matter for public anxiety, but they are not life-threatening.

Owen Jones, the author of this article, writes on many subjects, but is currently concerned with how to test for bed bugs. If you want to know more, visit our website now at Pest Management at Home.

Home-Produced Insecticides

The idea of having insects running around the home, going where they like, is quite disgusting to most people. The thought of bugs running over you whilst you are asleep or foraging off your food in the pantry is quite off-putting too.

Most people go straight to the hardware shop to purchase insect spray and poison. However, nowadays, lots of people are concerned about using sprays because of the depletion of the ozone layer and because sprays kill indiscriminately.

Poisons may also be arbitrary killers of insects, unless the poison is targetted on one pest insect or a group of pest insects. However, there are other methods of targetting pest insects using time-honored methods, some of which have been placed in sprays and liquids and rebranded as modern.

Many people already have these insect killers in their food cupboard or garden shed, which will come as a huge surprise to them. OK, you may not have boric acid in the kitchen, but it is easy to purchase and if you add it to sugar and a little water or cola, ants and cockroaches will lap it up.

However, boric acid is indigestible to these bugs and it sets in their stomachs leaving no space for real food. Unable to regurgitate it and unable to eat anything else, they will starve to death.

You can distribute it in small puddles on shards of glass or tile or soak balls of cotton wool in the liquid and leave them lying in corners where other animals cannot go like behind a couch that is located against a wall.

You can use boric acid against termites as well, but you have to employ another tactic. Termites consume wood and hence the difficulty, they will not take boric acid and sugar. However, if you mix the boric acid with paraffin or propylene glycol or even a thin oil, the liquid will soak the boric acid into the wood.

If the liquid does not deter the termites or after it has evaporated and worn off, the boric acid will still remain there to kill the foraging termites. This is best used as a preventative procedure. If you have a significant infestation of termites, you require professional help ASAP.

Boric acid, also called borax, will also kill silverfish, but you need a different tactic again. Silverfish are able to survive on amounts of food that we are not able to even see.

Therefore, if you mix boric acid, flour and water into a very thin liquid, you could dip a rag into it and wipe it onto surfaces that you do not use often like window cills, the insides of cupboard doors and the bottom of wardrobes.

It will remain there for years and as silverfish, ants or cockroaches come along, there is a decent chance that they will discover it and eat it, causing their demise.

There are other household things that can be used too. Cornflour is indigestible to cockroaches, so a bit of stale bread soaked in this and water will also work.

Diatomaceous earth is helpful against cockroaches and bed bugs, but it will not kill them, it just destroys their protective waxy coat to permit chemical pesticides to do their job.

Owen Jones, the author of this article writes on many subjects, but is at present involved with how to get rid of pests. If you would like to know more, go over to our website at Bugs Infestation.

Bed Bugs And Public Health

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , — Owen Jones @ 8:41 pm

Bed bugs have almost certainly been bothering people for ever, particularly in warmer countries. In fact Aristotle wrote about them in 400 BC, but they were not prevalent in the United Kingdom until after the Great Fire of London in 1666. People deduced that bed bugs lived in wood because the bed bug plagues only started after 1670; they supposed that the bed bugs that had come in with timber imported to reconstruct London.

They have been there ever since, except for about fifty years between the 1940’s and 1995. A similar pattern can be seen in most of the developed Western world, because after the Second World War there was a determined effort to clear out the old bomb-damaged city slums and start again. As they went through the cities clearing and cleaning they spread tons of DDT which virtually wiped out bedbugs and some other widespread household pests.

The authorities in the United States also went on the rampage with DDT with a similar result. Then something occurred and we can be quite specific about the date: in 1995 reports of bedbug infestations started flooding in again.

One district of London reported infestations of bedbugs doubling every year from 1995 to 2001 and the US National Pest Management Agency reported a 71% increase in bedbug incidents between 2000 and 2005. A pest control company in North Carolina said that a quarter of the hotels it surveyed between 2002 and 2006 had a bedbug problem.

Bedbugs feed by inserting two tubes into the host’s skin, one pumps in a sort of saliva containing anticoagulant and anaesthetic and the other sucks blood. This saliva can result in irritation in some individuals in the form of lumps, which may or may not itch. Having lots of bites can result in anaemia.

The main risk most people run is secondary infection from scratching with dirty finger nails. In 2008, the World health Organization gave the opinion that there was some evidence that bedbugs might cause asthma and that being bitten repeatedly may make the victim more susceptible to other illnesses.

Bedbugs have all the right equipment and behavioural patterns to be able to spread diseases, but there have been no known instances to date. However, knowing that there are bedbugs around can cause some people to obsess about them, which often results in insomnia and irritability.

If you discover bedbugs in your hotel, you should report it to the manager and if you stay in rented accommodation you should advise the landlord. If it is your own home you should seek guidance from the local Environmental Health Agency attached to the council, because bedbugs can proliferate from one house to the next very rapidly.

Many old terraced houses are not completely sealed off from one another enabling bedbugs to roam and establish new colonies and bedbugs can be taken home from hotels in your suitcase or clothing. Bedbugs are a matter for public concern, but they are not life-threatening.

Owen Jones, the writer of this article, writes on many topics, but is at present concerned with bed bugs spray. If you are interested in this, please go over to our website now at Picture Of Bed Bugs for further information.

February 1, 2012

Looking At Bed Bugs Up Close

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , — Owen Jones @ 6:09 pm

There are in fact quite a few types of bed bug, but the one that most people mean by ‘bedbugs’ is Cimex lectularius. Other species of bedbugs will extract human blood, but normally only if their favoured host, like poultry, is not around.

Bedbugs are small, but not too small to see. Adults are about four or five millimetres in length and one-and-a-half to three millimetres wide. They are brownish in colour, but may seem banded because they are covered in short hairs.

Having said that, they are still not easy to have a close look at, because they are very quick and only come out at night. In fact, their preferred dinner time is more of an early breakfast, because they normally dine on us an hour before dawn. If you want to find or catch some bedbugs, this is the best time too do it, because you may see them trying to get home with full stomachs to sleep it off for a few days before setting out again.

So, rather than waste your time, it is probably better to study a number of pictures of bedbugs first so that you know what you are looking for.. Bedbugs are attracted by heat and CO2, so one way of trying to catch a few is putting a bar of soap in a centimetre of water and then lying on the bed. After half an hour, get the soap and whip the bed clothes back. You can dab up any bed bugs with the soap.

Then you will have lots of time to study them under a magnifying lens. If they are not living in your mattress and you are certain that you have bed bugs, check behind any loose-fitting woodwork.

They love to get into dark crevices to sleep it off and skirting boards or architrave are perfect. So is damaged plaster, broken lino or ripped wall paper.

Hardly any crack is too narrow for them, because they are so flat themselves, as you can observe from photos. They look as if they have been crushed. However, the nymphs or babies are very tiny, a bit rounder and often whitish. It takes six moultings for a nymph to become an adult and the moulted skins look just like the insect that left it, but with nothing inside it – as if it had been kind of sucked out.

The bedbug’s skin is actually the key to killing it, as bedbugs have become tolerant to most everyday insecticides. Their skin, or exoskeleton, has a waxy layer on it to prevent dehydration. If you can scrape off that wax, the insect will dry out and die.

Some modern bedbug sprays incorporate finely powdered glass or silicone which sticks to the insect and as it wriggles into crevices, the powder scrapes the wax off. Diatomaceous earth was used for the same purpose long ago and it is making a comeback in the fight to eradicate bed bugs. It is non-toxic and environmentally friendly, so safe to deploy in your home and close to your pets.

Owen Jones, the author of this piece, writes on many subjects, but is at present involved with bed bugs extermination. If you are interested in this, please go over to our website now at Picture Of Bed Bugs for further information.

January 29, 2012

The House Fly

The house fly is a common flying insect which is found all over the world but is mostly in warmer climates because it is ideal there for their growth. It is an insect with 2 weeks of breeding cycle and lays as many as approximately 500 eggs at a time.

The longest life span of the common house fly is four weeks. Due to such breeding behavior, its number increases many fold within a short period of time, if supplied with appropriate conditions.

Sitting on piles of dung and spoiled food like eggs, fruits, flesh etc, house flies are one of the most widespread means of transferring germs to human beings and other mammals.

These bugs equally like to sit on fresh and rotting food, hence becoming a source of significant illnesses. A single leg of this insect carries millions of harmful germs which are the agents of serious diseases to human beings, threatening their health. They transfer numerous parasitic, viral, and bacterial illnesses.

Whilst in large numbers, these small pests may be a serious headache for residents of that area. To be rid of house flies is more difficult and more challenging because of the domestic nature of these bugs.

It does not matter that these are also flying insects just like mosquitoes, we can?t use the same ways to kill them because flies are bigger in size and are found around food. It could become very hazardous to use pesticides on the flying pests to kill them.

If we do so, it may poison our food and the region too, resulting in serious health hazards. They can be killed by striking them with a fly swatter but this course of action is also risky and awkward because it is impossible to kill a substantial amount of flies like that.

It can also become very unpleasant to see them dead in front of you, particularly whilst you are eating. Instead of targeting the mature flying bugs, we should target the breeding places of these flies.

In order to do that, it is very important to know where the house fly lays eggs. Mostly it lays eggs around dead and decaying organic material. Its eggs are whitish in colour and the larvae or maggots are yellowish.

Examine your environment to determine which places could be appropriate mating and breeding areas for house flies such as places where there is garbage or faeces. Cleanliness is the first step to take in action against these insects.

It is practical to use some insecticides to kill the larvae and pupae of these bugs together with the adults. It will reduce the likelihood of growth in numbers of these flies. Rather than simply throwing your waste out, always process it before throwing it away.

Always keep it covered and never let it become a place for such pests to feed and grow on. You should always dispose off your waste with suitable care. The likelihood of suffering from health issues by such insects can be greatly reduced if we make a little effort to keep our environment clean and hygienic.

There are also items that you could use to kill adult house flies like sticky tape hanging from the ceiling or shelves, although they may be unsightly and the electric fly traps that lure flies with a blue light and kills by electrocution.

Owen Jones, the author of this piece writes on numerous subjects, but is currently involved with the House Flies. If you want, go to our web site at Indoor Bug Zapper.

January 22, 2012

Don’t Let The Bed Bugs Bite, If you can Help It

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , — Owen Jones @ 11:50 pm

Did your parents or your grandparents use to say ‘Sleep tight. Don’t let the bed bugs bite’ when they tucked you up in bed as a child? You had almost certainly never seen a bed bug and perhaps did not even know what they were speaking about, but they would have. This is because anybody alive previous to the Second World War would almost certainly have been bitten pretty often.

Up until the 1940’s or 1950’s, depending upon where your relatives lived, bed bugs were very common. Just about every street had them and because the houses were not sealed off from each other and because people were in and out of each other’s houses more often, bed bugs were spread far and wide. When they tell you: ‘Don’t Let The Bed Bugs Bite’, they are repeating a real wish, even a prayer from previous days.

Bed bugs were a part of everyday, or rather every night, life for millions of people in Great Britain for four hundred years. They had been around in warmer parts in Europe and the world for thousands of years before that, but they did not proliferate in Britain until after the Great Fire of London in 1666.

It is thought that they came to Britain with the timber and tradesmen that were brought in to reconstruct London. By 1670, bedbugs had become a plague on the population of the UK, like they were elsewhere in Europe. Fifty years afterward, bedbugs had established themselves in Jamaica and probably the United States of America as well.

Bedbugs like to live in dark cracks near to their source of food, which is blood. Not all bedbugs prefer human blood; some prefer dogs’ blood others prefer chickens’ blood et cetera. However, they will all eat human blood if their preferred host is not about.

There is one bedbug though, Cimex lectularius, that does only eat human blood and this is the little blighter that people are talking about when they say: ;Don’t let the bed bugs bite’.

So, bedbugs, if you have them, will be behind any loose-fitting skirting boards or architraves, loose wall paper or in damaged plaster or lino. Their favourite place of all in in a torn mattress. They are drawn to their blood donor by CO2 on the breath and body heat.

When they have located a host, they send out a message to all their friends and relatives by the use of pheromones. Bed bugs are most active an hour before dawn and it takes them only five minutes to conclude their dinner.

When they bite, bedbugs insert two tubes into you, one squirts saliva containing coagulant and anaesthetic and the other sucks up blood. This is why individuals seldom feel that they are being bitten. Sometimes they do not know for up to nine days and some people never know, because they are not allergic to the saliva.

Those that are allergic, may get an itchy lump, but it may not itch either. It depends on the person. Often the bumps are in rows of three, like flea bites. They are quite similar to mosquito bites, but they do not have a red dot at the centre. Luckily for us, bedbugs do not transmit human diseases, although many bites can temporarily damage the immune system and can lead to anaemia.

Owen Jones, the writer of this article, writes on many topics, but is at present concerned with bed bugs extermination. If you are interested in this, please go over to our website now at Picture Of Bed Bugs for more information.

Good Night, Sleep Tight, Don’t Let The Bed Bugs Bite

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , — Owen Jones @ 11:16 pm

‘Good Night, Sleep Tight, Don’t Let The Bed Bugs Bite’ is something that people said often to their children in the first half of the 20th Century. Some parents still say it even now, but before they really meant it, because there were bed bugs – everywhere. Western cities were seriously infested with them and had been for three hundred years or longer.

Bed bugs were exterminated in the Forties and Fifties by the widespread use of DDT, which has since been banned. In 1995, reported instances of bed bug infestations increased rapidly for the first time in fifty years. The number of bed bug incidents has been increasing ever since. Therefore, the saying ‘Good Night, Sleep Tight, Don’t Let The Bed Bugs Bite’ has become pertinent again.

The trouble is that it is very, very hard to prevent them biting and it is almost as hard to eradicate them, because modern bedbugs have become almost completely resistant to the insecticides that we have available to us today.

Scientists in several companies are working on chemicals to eradicate bedbugs, but as of yet, there has not been much advancement. Pharaoh ant venom is deadly to bedbugs, but it is proving difficult to synthesize in suitable volumes.

If you suspect that you have bed bugs, you will probably have seen a few bugs, have had a few bites or have seen bedbug droppings. Bed bugs are small, brown, wingless insects about three-sixteenths of an inch long and a little rounded on top although their general look is flattish.

Bedbug bites frequently result in bumps, which may come up up to nine days after you were bitten. Occasionally they are in rows of three like flea bites. They are usually itchy. Bed bug droppings are brown. They often look like brown streaks on a sheet.

If you have bedbugs, there is not a lot you can do yourself. Bedbugs do not inevitably live in dirty conditions. However, they do like clutter, because it provides more hiding places. If you have had books, magazines or clothes lying in the same spot for weeks, move them to see if bedbugs come out.

If you are in hired accommodation, get in touch with your landlord. If you own your own home, you have a big problem. The first move should be to check with your local heath authorities for the phone number of a reputable, experienced, professional pest controller.

While you are waiting for them to come round, tidy away all your clutter and strip your beds. Bedbugs, in all their forms, are killed by temperatures above 46C (120F), so either put your clothes on a boil wash or put them in the clothes dryer on a hot temperature.

A good pest controller will inspect your property meticulously and give you a detailed report and a price tag. The report will include an action plan of how to prepare for treatment and avoid further infestation. The price of the clean-up should be based on this report, it should not be a flat fee.

Owen Jones, the author of this piece, writes on many topics, but is at present concerned with how do you get bed bugs? If you are interested in this, please go over to our website now at Picture Of Bed Bugs for more details.

January 21, 2012

Getting Rid Of Bed Bugs

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , — Owen Jones @ 7:34 pm

Although people are severely affected by an influx of bed bugs, the medical authorities declare that they are not a serious health hazard. Tell that to people who are suffering from bed bugs! Bed bugs are not known to pass on disease, that is a fact, but they cause paranoia and insomnia which can have far ranging results.

On top of this, bed bugs are very problematic to eradicate from one’s home. The difficulty is that bedbugs are almost totally resistant to insecticides. This is because they have a thick waxy coat which prevents chemicals from attacking the insect. Bedbugs are like a cross between a beetle and a tick.

Unfortunately, it is almost impossible to eradicate an infestation of bed bugs on your own. Bedbugs are susceptible to heat, so you can steam clean your house to get rid of bedbugs, but the only guaranteed method is to call in professional pest controllers.

If you think that you may have a bedbug infestation, there are a number of items that you should look out for. Firstly, the bugs themselves: if you have a lot of clutter in your accommodation like heaps of newspapers, piles of ironing or clothes, move them and be on the look out for insects running for cover. Bedbugs are really fairly shy animals.

Look in your bed sheets. Look for flecks of blood – your blood – and excrement – the bedbugs’ excrement, which looks like russet smears. You may also see shed skins – skins that the bedbugs have shed as part of their growing process, like a snake does.

Bed bugs live in beds, clutter, clothing, cracks, torn wallpaper, broken plaster, under carpets and anywhere that is small and safe. They love to conceal themselves behind skirting boards, so sealing these up with mastic is a good thing.

The best method to be clear of bed bugs is not to have them in the first place, but this is easier said than done, because there is a real epidemic of bedbugs in the West. Nearly all western cities are experiencing a plague of bedbugs and have been since the mid-Nineties.

Bed bugs do not just live in homes. Bed bugs live everywhere: not just in poor homes, not only in dirty houses and not merely in houses even. A bedbug can be picked from anywhere where people congregate, because bedbugs move around by hitching a lift on a human carrier. You can pick up a bedbug on a bus, in a taxi, at the cinema, in your doctor’s surgery or in a hotel.

This is quite frightening, because it suggests that you can never be safe from bed bugs. If you hang your coat up in a cloakroom or travel on public transport, you have a very high risk of picking up a bed bug and one bedbug can lay 300 eggs. Then you are really in trouble.

Not just that, but bedbugs can go without food for a year, like fleas can, so if you move into a ‘new’ apartment or house, these insects could be lying dormant waiting for you to give them a wake-up call.

Owen Jones, the writer of this piece, writes on many topics, but is at present involved with bed bugs spray. If you are interested in this, please go over to our website now at Picture Of Bed Bugs for further details.

January 7, 2012

The Difference Between Insects Bites

Most insects will defend themselves if they feel threatened. This is fairly amazing when you think about how small insects are likened with the mammalian interloper. Most insects will only attack if you wander into their territory.

There are also insects that have to drink blood and they actively seek their prey. This sort includes insects like mosquitoes, bed bugs and fleas.

Ants form the largest segment of biters. All ants will try to bite if they feel the need, but most black ants simply do not have big enough mandibles (or jaws) to get a grasp.

The big exception in all ant and ant-like species are the soldiers, which have huge mandibles compared to the workers.

Red ants may bite with or without poison and some sting as well. Formic acid is their normal chemical weapon. Some ants inject it, which is what we feel if we get bitten by red ants, but other ants spray it into the eyes of its attackers.

The most agonizing sting of any insect is provided by the Bullet Ant of Central and South America. The Bullet Ant’s sting has the top rating possible on the Schmidt Sting Pain Index. The index ranges from zero to four; zero being painless (to humans) through two for bees and wasps to four for agonizing pain.

The Fire Ant, which is renowned for its painful bite ranks a 1.2 on this scale, but level 1.8 is likened to having a staple fired into your cheek. The European honey bee is on number two and the Red Harvester Ant is on level three.

Some bites and stings are not so high on the index but may still become fatal. The Jack Jumper Ant is in this group and individuals, particularly hypersensitives, have been known to die from Fire Ant stings, which inject piperidine alkaloids rather than formic acid.

The jaws of the Trap Jaw Ant are the fastest closing jaws in the animal kingdom. They have been measured at 230 KPH (143 MPH). Another curious ant defence is carried out by a Malaysian species: it ejects its stomach on to its aggressor.

The stomach acids contain acetophones which completely immobilize insects. Regrettably, the soldier dies because its stomach has been torn out.

Bees, ants and wasps are all related in the order called Hymenoptera. Bees and wasps only sting although some wasps do have large jaws too. One definition of a wasp is ‘any insect of the order Hymenoptera that is neither a bee nor an ant’ (Wikipedia).

Not all wasps are black and yellow. There are not a lot of insects that do not have a type of wasp preying on it, which makes them very vital in the biocontrol of harmful insects. A lot of wasps do not sting their prey to kill it for food, they sting it to immobilize it.

When paralyzed, the wasp lays her eggs in the prey, which becomes fresh food for her young when they hatch out. This is usually the only time when a wasp eats meat in its whole life, because adult wasps feed on nectar and honey like bees.

As a bee stings it releases pheromones which encourage other bees nearby to sting too. The most aggressive stingers though are vespid wasps (common black and yellow wasps).

Fleas, ticks and bed bugs, unlike mosquitoes, really feed on blood, that is they use it for food, whereas the mosquito needs it as the ‘white’ of her eggs. There have been times in our history when losing a few drops of blood to a flea was not the worst thing about being bitten by them.

They also carried the Plague, which wiped out a substantial percentage of the populace of Europe a number of times.

Spiders and scorpions make up the reasons for the majority of insect bites but they are comparatively rare.

Owen Jones, the writer of this piece, writes on numerous subjects, but is at present concerned with Insect Removal. If you want to know more, please go over to our website now at Pest Management at Home.

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