Larvae

June 5, 2009

Some Injurious Insects You Should Omit From Your Garden

So how do you sense unhealthy insects in your garden? Some lawn pests can be comfortably recognized such as the tomato hornworm, which is comparatively strapping and feeds during daylight hours. In other cases, either the microscopic size or the feeding habits of the intruders make them toilsome to see

soon. These pests are usually recognized by the detriment they cause. Among the most discernible garden pests are ants and grasshoppers. A trail of ants is too common a sight to trigger much alarm, but it should, seeing that where there are ants you may find aphids. Some ants will even screen these nuisances in order to eat the honeydew they secrete.

Insects that storm the interiors of plants are among the most bad and also the most enigmatical to chance on and to struggle. Most borers, larvae of beetles or moths hatched from eggs laid inside a tree trunk or a thick stem can often be destroyed only by probing with a thin wire. Upon hatching, the larvae make headway on feeding and tunneling through the plant, no joking disrupting the flow of water and nutrients throughout its system.

On smaller plants, the first symptom may be a bent stalk which, upon close study, will show indications of boring within. Flat headed apple tree borers, common in every nook and cranny of the country, leave the bark discolored and somewhat sunken, but without the castings left by other varieties. European corn borers, the most adverse of this type of pest, prey upon some 200 varieties of fruits and vegetables. One a cinch system to tell if there is a borer invasion is by noticing slight holes in the trunk or stem, surrounded by leavings of sawdust or pith that have been tunneled out.

Just as borers work within trunks, stems and stalks, even smaller pests, known collectively as leaf miners, feed in the nigh on infinitesimal space connecting the surfaces of leaves. Leaf miners can be the larvae of beetles, moths or flies. They show themselves by leaving blisters upon a leaf or by causing discolored blotches. If the leaf is torn apart, microscopic veins are visible and you can see the tunnels the miners have hollowed out.

Healthy trees and shrubs inveterately can cope with the parent insects’ elbow-greases to implant their borer eggs, but a number of factors can deplete the plant, making it more accessible to storming.. These include drought, sunscald, industrial pollutants, wounds inflicted by other insects and injuries from tools. In such cases, competent lawn pest control is top-priority to check the survival of your plants.

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April 9, 2009

Ticks: the Parasites That Mess up Your Dog’s Health

Like mosquitoes, ticks suck blood out of a dog’s body by stinging it. Ticks live and survive on the body of the dog. These parasites are usually the carriers of many contagious diseases. In America these diseases are not only confined to dogs but also infect human beings. Some contagious diseases like Lyme disease, Rocky Mountain spotted fever and Ehrlichiosis are caused due to the ticks that your pet dog may have. It’s very wise to get some high quality spa dog shampoo to keep the ticks and fleas away.

The Life Span of a Tick

Ticks normally live on the dog’s body and treat it as a host. They live off the blood from your dog’s body. Like other parasites, ticks too have to go through three stages of life. The first stage is the larvae, the second is the nymph and finally the third stage is the full grown adult tick. In all the three stages this parasites survive by sucking the blood from your dog’s body. When a tick stings your dog once, it is more than enough to cause irritation in the skin that surrounds the sting.

As mentioned earlier, a tick has to go through three physical changes in its life time. In the larvae stage the tick has 6 legs and is living on the dog’s body for 2 to 3 days. The next stage is the nymph stage, here it has eight legs. The nymph stays on the dog’s body for 7-10 days and finally it turns into another male or female adult tick capable of breeding and spreading the infestation. Be sure to view these elevated dog feeders for your pet.

The female tick conceives when it is on the dog’s body. It remains there for three weeks and during this time sucks so much blood out of a dog’s body that it becomes difficult for the tick to sustain its weight and so it falls down on the ground and lays its eggs immediately. The females are the ones that you will find on your dogs body. They drink so much blood that they become big and turgid and become conspicuous to the human eye. You will need to get many different types of dog supplies online for your dog to prevent infestation.

How to remove a tick?

If you notice that your dog’s body has been invaded by ticks and they are sucking his blood, your immediate reaction should be to remove the ticks from the dog’s body as soon as possible. Use a pair of tweezers to remove the tick because if you use your hands to pluck it there are chances of its body breaking into two parts, the head and the mouth part and the body part. So always use a tweezers. Once the tick is removed just check if you have managed to remove the entire tick because if its head and mouth remain attached to your dogs body it may cause inflammation and irritation to your pet.

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August 28, 2008

Natural is NOT Non-Toxic

You would not believe the number of people who confuse the terms “non-toxic” and “natural.” I’m here to tell you, they are not the same thing. There are lots of natural substances that are deadly poison. Take a look at arsenic, hemlock or nightshade. All are natural, but none are non-toxic. It is the same thing in the natural flea control.
Archer is an Insect Growth Regulator that stops the eggs and larvae from developing. It doesn’t even kill fleas! But it does break the life cycle and is totally non-toxic. Now, that is a good thing. The world is so inundated with more and more chemicals that removing toxins wherever we find them is the best way to live.

But what happens if you find that you still have adult fleas to deal with and don’t want to wait the 30 to 45 days that it would take to let them die off of old age? Well, there are still ways to stay relatively low toxic and still get the job done. Conquer is like a fourth generation pyrethrum which is an insecticide made from the chrysanthemum flower in Africa. It is tightly targeted to kill fleas and to be relatively non-reactive with mammals. In addition, it breaks down rapidly in our environment. That was the problem with the old insecticides – they never broke down. They had a half-life longer than you and me!

The final step is to put Frontline on the dogs and cats. Frontline kills fleas that get on the pets, but it does not go into the pet’s bloodstream. It stays on the outside by bonding with the oil layer of the skin.

So, use an IGR always, use an insecticide only if you have to, and keep Frontline on your pets throughout the year. You won’t have fleas, guaranteed.

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