Patrick in Na'alehu, Hawaii

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Me and my friends on the 366 bus. summ silly fight.

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Ticks:         Brown Dog Tick Order Acarina           

Appearance:

        Adult males are flat, about 1/8 inch long, and uniformly red-brown with tiny pits scattered over the back. They do not enlarge as much upon feeding as the females do. Adult females resemble the males in size, shape and color before feeding. As they feed, females become engorged and swell to inch long and 1/4 inch wide. The legs, mouthparts and shield area behind the head remain redish-Brown, but the enlarged portion of the body becomes gray-blue to olive.

        Immature stage Larvae, sometimes called “seed ticks”, have only six legs. Once they attach themselves to a host and get a blood meal, they will drop off, shed there skin and emerge with 8 legs

 

 

Habitat:

        Ticks can be found outdoors in southern United States during any time of the year, Ticks spend the bulk of their life on or near the ground. Since they cannot run, hop, fly, or move quickly, they must climb onto objects to wait for a host to pass by. Outdoors, ticks can be found in tall grass, shrubs, weeds, wood piles, brick and rock walls, under skirting of mobile homes, dog houses, as well as any place that a host may sleep and lounge on. Indoors, ticks can be found in and around the area that a host animal may rest and lounge, under corners of rugs and carpet, in folds of sofas, lounge chairs and cushions.

Food:

        Blood

Life Cycle:

        Ticks have four stages in their life cycle: egg, larva, nymph and adult. Adult ticks may require several days of feeding before they are able to reproduce. Male hard ticks usually die soon after mating, and females die soon after laying their eggs. Egg-laying begins about three days after the engorged adult female drops from the host. She may deposit as many as 5000 eggs in places such as between boards, under plaster, or carpeting or in other cracks and crevices. The eggs hatch in three weeks to several months, depending on the weather. They can live up to eight months while waiting for a host. Adults can live up to 11/2 years without feeding, but must feed before mating. After mating, the female will completely engorge herself with blood and then drops off the host to lay eggs. Mating usually occurs while adult ticks are on the body of the host animal. Adult females need only to feed once before laying one large batch of eggs.

General Information:

A home can become heavily infested if the family dog picks up ticks from an infested residence, boarding kennel, open fields, or similar place where other infested dogs have been located.

Spiders Class Arachnida: Order Araneae
Appearance:

Spiders have characteristic appearance which is easily recognizable. They possess eight legs which immediately separate them from insects, which have only six legs. Their bodies have two regions: a cephalothorax (fused head and thorax) and an abdomen.

Habitat:

Many spiders are associated with moister and, therefore, are found in basements, crawl spaces, and other damp parts of buildings. Others live in warm, dry places so are found in subfloor air-vents, in upper corners of rooms or in attics. Most species hide in cracks, darkened areas, or other retreats which they construct of silk.

Food:

Small insects.

Life Cycle:

Young spiders, or spiderlings, resemble the adults except for size and, sometimes, coloration.

General Information:

All spiders have a pair of jaw-like structures, called chelicerae. At the end of each is a hollow, claw-like fang. Each fang has a small opening in the end through which venom is injected into the prey. Spinnerets, located at the tip end of the abdomen, are silk spinning glands used for web making. Many species of spiders are common household pests. Remember that every “cobweb” was made by a spider. Although all spiders use venom when they bite and kill their prey, the black widow and the brown recluse spiders are the only North American species consistently dangerous to humans. Under most conditions outdoors, spiders are considered beneficial because they feed on insects.

Silverfish and Firebrats         Order Thysanura                

Appearance:

These insects of this order have the same characteristic shape. Their bodies are flattened, long and slender, slender appendages are found at the rear of the body. All silverfish and firebrats are wingless. The young look like small adults.

        Silverfish: 3/8-1/2 inch. Tapering, carrot-shaped. Silver-grey, coated with scales. Threadlike antennae and 3 tail filaments, all shorter than body. Small black eyes.

        Firebrats: 3/8-1/2 inch. Mottled gray and tan or brown. Threadlike antennae, longer than body, usually swept back parallel to sides. 3 tail filaments.

Habitat:

       Indoors in warm, dry places, including closets, bookcases, behind baseboards, in partitions, or in bathtubs, (Firebrats: near ovens, heating pipes, and furnaces.) Silverfish and firebrats are most active at night and can run very swiftly.

Food:

        Silverfish: Dried cereals, flour, glue, and starch, including stiffeners used in clothing and bound books, and coated papers used in magazines.

        Firebrats: Crumbs and scraps of dry human food near cooking and heating devices.

Life Cycle:

        Silverfish: No metamorphosis. Oval white eggs are dropped in a few places week after week. Eggs hatch in 2-8 weeks. Nymphs have the same body form as adults. Full size is attained in about 2 years,

        Firebrats: No metamorphosis. At intervals female lays spherical white eggs with soft shells in clusters of 50 or more. Hatching and subsequent growth take weeks or many months, depending on temperature, humidity, and food supply. Nymphs take up to 2 years and about 40 molts to reach full size. Maximum life-span in warm situations is about 30 months.

General Information:

        Silverfish: due to its scaly covering, it is able to escape from the grip of ants and spiders. Silverfish can survive without food for months.

Scorpions          Sorpionida Centruroides        

Appearance:

        1.5 – 2 3/4 inches in length. Dark brown to tan, often striped with greenish yellow along the back. Abdomen is slender, constricted at each segment, pale or dark depending on the species.

Habitat:

      Most scorpions are active at night. During the day they hide under dark crevices, under bark, stones, and litter on the ground. In houses, they are most often found in undisturbed areas such as closets, seldom-used shoes, or folded clothing.

Food:

      Small, soft bodied insects and spiders. They will eat other species of scorpions and even small individuals of their own species. Small insects are eaten immediately, but larger prey are stung and eaten after they cease to struggle.

Life Cycle:

      Female keeps eggs in sac, then carries hatchlings on back until they can fend for themselves. Male uses pincers to pull female on top of him to mate.

General Information:

      They have poor eyesight, so do not stalk or chase prey, but lie in waiting to grab it with their pincers. Most species which enter houses are not very poisonous, their stings being comparable to those of bees or wasp. However, certain species in Arizona and New Mexico can be dangerous, such as the Centruroides gertschi Stahnke and Centruroides sculpteratus Ewing, which can reach lengths of 2 to 3 inches.

Rodents

 

Norway Rat

Roof Rat

House Mouse

 

Characteristic

Norway Rat

Roof Rat

House Mouse

General appearance

large, robust

Sleek, graceful

small, slender

Adult size      

weight

7-18 oz

5-9 oz

½ – 1 oz

length      

head & body

7-9.5 in

6-8 in

2-3.5 in

tail

6-8 in

7-10 in

3-4 in

Snout

blunt

pointed

pointed

Ears

small, covered with short hairs; do not reach eyes

large, nearly naked; can be pulled over eyes

large, some hair

Eyes

small

large, prominent

small

Tail

dark above, pale beneath

uniformly dark

uniformly dark

Fur

brown with scattered black; shaggy

grey to black; smooth

light brown, light gray; smooth

Droppings

capsule shaped, 3/4 in

spindle shaped, .5 in

rod shaped, .5 in

Senses      

Sight

poor, color blind

poor, color blind

poor, color blind

Smell, Taste, Hearing

excellent

excellent

excellent

Food

omnivorous; often preference for meats .8-1 oz per day

omnivorous; especially fruits, nuts, grains vegetables; .5-1 oz day

omnivorous, prefers cereal grains; .1 oz per day

Water

15-30 ml/day

15-30 ml/day

3-9 ml/day; can subsist Without free water

Feeding habits

shy to new objects; steady eater

shy to new objects; steady eater

inquisitive; nibbler

Climbing

readily climbs; limited Agility

very agile, active climber

good climber

Nests

usually burrows

walls, attics, trees

within buildings, stored food

Home range radius

98-164 ft

98-164 ft

10-33 ft

Age at mating (months)

2-3

2-3

1.5-2

Breeding season

spring and fall peaks

spring and fall peaks

year long

Gestation period (days)

22

22

19

Young per litter

8-12

4-8

4-7

Litters per year

4-7

4-6

8

Length of life

1 year

1 year

1 year

GENERAL INFORMATION:

Rats and mice attack our food in a variety of ways and places. Such places are farm fields, orchards, and livestock facilities, during its processing, storage and transport, and while it is in our supermarkets, restaurants and homes. And what the rats and mice don’t eat, they spoil by contaminating it with their urine, feces, or fur. Experts estimate that rats and mice destroy enough food each year to feed 200 million people.
In buildings, rodents damage doors, floors, ceilings and walls as a result of their burrowing and gnawing activity.
Rodents have been responsible for the spread of various diseases to people and domestic animals. Some of those diseases are the Plague, which killed 25,000,000 people in Europe during the 14th century, Murine typhus, Rickettsial pox, Salmonellosis (food poisoning), Rat-bite fever, Weils disease or leptospirosis.

  • Pillbugs and Sowbugs          Class Crustacea

    Appearance:

  •         The sowbug possess two tail-like appendages at the tip of the abdomen and are incapable of rolling into a tight ball. The common pillbug lacks such appendages at the tip of the abdomen and can roll itself into a ball. This habit is the reason they are often called “roly polies”.
  • Habitat:
  •         Are found under mulch or vegetable debris of all kinds and beneath objects on damp ground. They frequently invade damp basements and crawl spaces and may infest potted plants. A heavy infestation indoors generally indicates that there is a large population immediately outside the building.
  • Food:
  •         Both pillbugs and sowbugs feed upon decaying vegetable matter.
  • Cockroaches that invade buildings will consume a wide variety of food and nonfood items, such as:
    starches sweets grease plant materials meat products cheese leather bakery products forms of glue
    hair dead animals beer flakes of dried skin starch in book bindings

     Life Cycle:

  • Cockroaches develop by a gradual metamorphosis that consists of three stages:
    1. Egg; the female produces a purse shaped egg capsule, called an ootheca.
    2. Nymph; nymphs hatch out of the egg capsule by working together to break open the capsule. When the egg capsule is opened, the tiny nymphs emerge to begin their life. The nymphs generally resemble the adults in appearance and behavior, but are smaller, do not have wings or wing pads, and usually have a different color. Newly molted nymphs are white, but will darken to the normal color within a few hours.
    3. Adults; depending on the species, the wings of an adult may be long. Some species have very short wings, which appear to be “wingless”. The length of time required for the eggs to hatch, for nymphs to develop, and the life span of adults will vary due to temperature, humidity, the quality of their diet, and other environmental conditions.

    General Information:

Cockroaches are among the most common insects. Based on fossil evidence cockroaches are known to have been present on Earth for 300 million years. There are approximately 3500 species of cockroaches worldwide – about 60 species are found in the United States. Cockroaches produce odorous secretions from various points in their bodies which can affect the flavor of various foods. Although disease producing organisms such as bacteria have been found on cockroach bodies, the principal disease transmitted by cockroaches are gastroenteritis diseases. These include food poisoning, dysentery, diarrhea and other illnesses. For the most part, however, cockroaches usually are not associated with severe illnesses or disease outbreaks.
Although cockroaches are able to move around quite easily, and some are able to fly, cockroaches are well known for moving to new areas via “hitchhiking”. Cockroaches are mostly active at night, during which time they forage for food, water and mates. They may be seen in the daytime, usually when a heavy population is present or when some other stress is placed on them (such as lack of food or water).

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