Posts Tagged ‘insects’

The Fight Against Mosquitoes Around The World

Sunday, December 4th, 2011

Winnipeg has long been Canada’s mosquito capital, but Edmonton is challenging it this year. These days, mosquito traps in Edmonton are catching five times more mosquitoes that those in Winnipeg. Rainy spells followed by warm weather are responsible for the colossal rise in the number of these maddening insects.

Residents of Edmonton are asking for a substantial rise in the budget to combat the mosquito populace which can carry West Nile Virus. West Nile Virus delivers indications similar to a severe bout of flu, although older and younger victims have passed away from epidemics. County health officials are considering spraying public areas before official public holidays to reduce the incidence of biting.

On the other side of the world, in Sidney, Australia, the parks department has also begun its anti-mosquito spraying plan and residents are invited to call in to be added to a ‘no spray’ list, if they fear the toxicity of the insect spray. It is considered that most individuals will prefer having their block and backyard sprayed as the numbers of mosquitoes are rising there as well.

However, the spraying plan has always proved a success in the past and will like continue to be so. This year it will be supplemented by poisoning ponds and lakes with larvacide, which is a more practical form of control adding fish to the ponds that eat mosquito larvae would be an even better way. The tablets are known as Altosid and last for 30 days, although they are also considering using XR which works for 150 days.

West Nile Virus is also a problem in Sidney, although there have not been any recorded cases yet. This means nothing though as most people who get WNF think that they have a summer cold. The city health authorities say that they are continuing to trap mosquitoes and carry out autopsies on dead birds to get an early warning of a likely WNV epidemic.

The city health department is warning all those over 50 years of age and those with a weakened immune system to take extra care by using a repellent including DEET, picaridin or lemon eucalyptus oil on bare skin and by wearing long trousers and long-sleeved shirts at dusk and at dawn.

They are also recommending doing fundamental maintenance and repairs around the home and garden. In particular, fly screens should be repaired and all stagnant water ought to be drained. They recommend drilling holes in any old tyres and containers that can hold water, because mosquitoes only require a half inch of water to breed.

In the meantime, in the States, anti-mosquito action is also being pursued. It appears that wherever you go in the world, the local authorities are trying to do something about the number of mosquitoes. Do they know something that we don’t?

Like in Sidney and Edmonton, they too are worried around the Developed world Nile Infection which seems to have crowd running afraid all over the world.

In Jacksonville, they are also recommending that people remove the mosquito’s breeding grounds from gardens and rubbish ground by up-turning any container that could hold water after rainfall. They also recommend unblocking drains and gutters.

They warn about keeping your animals safe from Eastern Equine Encephalitis during dawn and dusk and keeping yourself safe by wearing long clothing at dawn and dusk. Finally, they say to put DEET on all bare areas of skin.

Owen Jones, the writer of this article writes on more than a few subjects, but is currently involved with finding natural remedies for mosquito bites. If you want to know more, please go to our website at Getting Rid of Mosquito Bites.

Preventing Mosquito Bites And Diseases

Sunday, November 20th, 2011

So, you’ve got some time off work, college or school and you want to get outdoors and enjoy it. Maybe even go on holiday. What a good idea! Nevertheless, what happens when you get where you are going? The mosquitoes come out to get you.

If it were not so routine, it would sound like Freddy Kruger and Nightmare on Elm Street. The female mosquitoes need blood to produce eggs and they seek it out as voraciously as any vampire in a horror movie, while the males go sucking nectar from plants like fairies.

Well, that is the nightmare scenario, but it is not that far from the truth either. For many nations in the world it is also a real life and death problem. Millions of people die every year from malaria and tons more from dengue too. Yet both of these diseases are curable as are most of the other mosquito-borne diseases like Yellow Fever, Japanese Jungle Encephalopathy and Nile fever.

The first thing to understand is that typically these diseases can be inoculated against, particularly if you are going on vacation. The next thing to bear in mind - it might help - is that not all mosquitoes are the same. For example, in Thailand, the dengue-bearing mosquito (often called the ‘Egyptian’) comes out during the day time and so bites then too. Between about an hour before dawn and an hour after dusk, whereas the malaria-carrying mosquito, the Anopheles, is a night time huntress.

I am not suggesting that you can slacken your vigilance during the day, although many people take for granted that they can. Nobody wants dengue fever either.

So, what can you do? Before you go anywhere, read up on the district or check with medical experts. That part is not complicated, particularly, if you know how to explore the Internet. Then prepare yourself with inoculations if the risk is serious enough in your judgment or a medical expert’s judgment. In my estimation, that is the minimum that a conscientious person ought to be expected to do to protect him or herself, the family and the community at large.

Then there are a few other things you can do. For example, wear voluminous clothes, but long sleeves and long trousers. If you are thin on top by choice or not, wear a hat or cap. Dress in socks or stockings in the evening to safeguard your toes. Get a good-quality mosquito repellent and put it on your exposed skin, as often as necessary by the manufacturer, which is usually every four or five hours.

You could reasonably stop there, but I like to go a bit further, if the situation warrants it. If I am outside in the garden at home or in a hotel, I like to have one of those tennis racquet style electric bug zappers with me. They are fantastic for zapping the odd mosquito that buzzes you. They are good for clearing the bedroom before retiring too and lastly, if I’m renting, hiking, camping or caravaning, I might find space for a rechargeable lantern-style bug zapper too.

If the little so-and-sos are going to give me a fever, they are going to have to try very hard to do it.

Owen Jones, the author of this article writes on several subjects, but is currently involved with work on mosquito bite treatment problems. If you would like to know more or check out some great offers, please go to our website at Mosquito Bite Swellings.

The Re-emergence Of Bed Bugs In The United States

Friday, November 18th, 2011

Bed bugs are making a massive revival in the West. They were practically wiped out in the Fifties due to the widespread use of DDT, which has subsequently been proscribed. It took them forty to fifty years to recover, but in 1995 they started their comeback. In 2004, there were 82 instances of bed bugs in New York, but only five years later, in 2009, that figure had mushroomed to 10,985.

Of the top three Western cities with bed bug problems, two of them are in the USA. First is Colorado, Ohio, second is New York and third is Toronto, Canada. Fortunately, bedbugs do not transmit human diseases, although there is no known reason why they should not. They feed by inserting two tubes into the host’s skin and squirting spittle containing anaesthetic and anticoagulant through one and drawing blood with the other.

This injection of spittle means that bedbugs can feed on you without you even being aware of it, although that same spittle is responsible for the allergic reaction that most people undergo in the form of red marks, swelling and itchiness.

Once bedbugs have established themselves in a property, and by the time you see them, there is normally a heavy infestation in your premises, they are very hard to get rid of.

Once infected, you could have hundreds or even thousands of bedbugs. If you let it get this far, you will have to call in professional pest controllers and you may also have to throw out a pile of your furniture including your bed.

The main refuge locations for bedbugs are mattresses, sofas, curtains, clothes, pillows and rugs. They may have to be thrown out too. In very severe cases, you will have to move out for weeks while your dwelling is being cleaned.

Other favourite hiding locations are furniture, the bed frame, skirtings, architrave, loose wall paper and broken plaster. Sometimes whole plasterboard partition walls will have to be removed, as might skirtings and architraves. Another way of fighting bedbugs is to seal this woodwork off with caulk, mastic or silicone.

The difficulty is that even if you get rid of your bedbugs, you may get them back quite easily. Just as easily as anyone else can. This is because bedbugs like to hitch a lift. They manage this by attaching themselves to your clothing, for example, under your collar, in your pocket or in the lining and letting you take them home, where they can begin a new infestation.

In Denver, staff at the central library found that bedbugs were distributing themselves inside the spine of their books. The fact is that you cannot forecast where you will not uncover bedbugs. Infestations in judges’ chambers, dentists’ offices, doctors’ surgeries, cinemas, buses, taxis, schools and waiting rooms have all had to be fumigated.

It is time to be aware of bedbugs, they are not a serious health threat, but they are not pleasant either. Nobody wants them. So, keep your eyes open, be careful of buying second-hand furniture and launder your clothes in very hot water or dry clean them if you can.

Owen Jones, the writer of this piece, writes on many subjects, but is currently involved with getting rid of bedbugs? If you are interested in this, please go over to our website now at Picture Of Bed Bugs for further details.

Bitten By The Bug

Wednesday, November 9th, 2011

Bed bugs are not a new social issue by any means. People have been complaining about them for centuries, although they were not active in every country at the same time. There were bed bugs around the Mediterranean Sea thousands of years ago, but they did not get to Britain until the Seventeenth Century and to America until slightly after that.

Bed bugs were virtually cleared out in Europe and America after the Second World War, but they flourished elsewhere, Now we have them back again all over the world, but it took them nearly 50 years to come back. People tend to become more appalled by bed bugs than by mosquitoes, although they do the same sort of thing.

Bed bug bites may or may not itch and are very unlikely to transmit infection, unlike mosquito bites. Yet still we hate them and still we are ashamed of having them in our dwellings. This is a strange phenomenon, because bed bugs cannot consume rubbish, because they do not have a real mouth. However,the rumour was created a hundred years ago that just poor people living in ghettos suffered from bed bugs.

It was a falsehood, but it stuck. In fact, people with money tend to travel more than poorer people, so they are more likely to pick up bed bugs and take them home to create their very own infestation. An infestation may cause some aenemia, but the real concerns are psychological, because people might not sleep for fear of being bitten and this can lead to paranoia..

Bed bug bites are usually in a line, but not always in a straight line. They may look like red spots a quarter of an inch in diameter. People react in different ways: some people react right away, others have a delayed reaction. Some marks might last four or five days, some might not show at all. Some may itch or swell up, others will not.

Your first treatment should be to shower as normal and wash with mild soap, but the number one rule is not to scratch the bite as that might cause an infection from dirty finger nails. If you have to treat the bite further, you can|could try these herbs and plants:

Plantain: some individuals claim that they obtained relief from itching by rubbing the leaves of plantain onto the bites.

Wet poultice: traditional remedies include smothering the bites with wet clay; mashed potato; bread and milk; wet arrow root; pulverized rice and water or ground grain and water. Create a pasty sauce of one of these, slop it onto the bites and tie a bandage around it until it is completely dry. This ought to draw out any irritants that the bed bug administered to make your blood flow liberally.

Fresh herbs may be used too, but you either have to chew them into a mulch (traditional) or you could crush them in a pestle and mortar with some water or spittle. Traditional herbs to use are::wild geranium (Geranium maculatum); comfrey (Symphytum uplandica x); yellow dock (Rumex species); wild mallow (Malva neglecta) or chickweed (Stellaria media).

Owen Jones, the author of this piece, writes on many topics, but is currently concerned with Bed Bugs Treatment. If you want to know more, please go over to our website now at Pest Management at Home.

Eradicating Bed Bugs

Wednesday, November 2nd, 2011

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

On top of this, bed bugs are very difficult 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 stops 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 might have a bedbug infestation, there are a number of things that you must look out for. Firstly, the bugs themselves: if you have a great deal of clutter in your accommodation like heaps of newspapers, heaps of ironing or clothes, move them and be on the look out for insects running for cover. Bedbugs are actually fairly shy animals.

Look in your bed sheets. Look for specks of blood - your blood - and excrement - the bedbugs’ excrement, which looks like brown 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, damaged 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 idea.

The best way 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. Almost all western cities are experiencing a plague of bedbugs and have been since the mid-Nineties.

Bed bugs do not only live in homes. Bed bugs live everywhere: not just in poor homes, not only in dirty houses and not only in houses even. A bedbug can be picked from anywhere where people congregate, because bedbugs move about 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 means that you can not be safe from bed bugs. If you hang your coat up in a cloakroom or travel on public transport, you have a very high chance 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 author of this article, writes on many subjects, 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 more details.

How To Protect Yourself In The Backyard During The Summer

Wednesday, July 27th, 2011

The summer is the time for barbecues, backyard parties, lounging in the backyard or bathing in the pool. It is also the season for insects, usually of the flying kind. Flies and mosquitoes can be everything from mildly annoying to downright dangerous. So what can you do to protect yourself in the backyard during the summer?

The first thing to do is start clearing up your backyard before the summer begins. Mosquitoes breed in stagnant water and it only has to be a half-inch deep. This means that you should keep the gutters free from fallen leaves and other blockages.

Blocked gutters and drains are major breeding grounds, but so are all things that can hold rainwater. Flower pots, buckets, old tyres and folds in sheets are others.

Drill holes in pots, containers and old tyres; pull tarpaulins tight, upturn boats and canoes and if you have water features, make certain that there are either guppies or goldfish in there as well, because they are famous for feeding on mosquito larvae.

Making a pre-emptive strike on mosquito breeding grounds will radically lessen the number of mosquitoes in your garden and thereby reduce your liklihood of being given West Nile virus (in the USA). It will also protect you against E.coli.

However, your neighbours may not be as fastidious as yourself, so mosquitoes will still come into your garden. To protect yourself from these spray insect repellent containing DEET (25% +) on your clothes and exposed skin to avoid mosquito bites.

In the evening, suspend a bug zapper with a blue light and an electrified coil in the locality of where you are sitting. The best ones also use pheromones to attract mosquitoes, particularly octenol.

Some species of mosquitoes hang around animals, so put some natural mosquito repellent on your dogs or do not allow them to lie at your feet.

Do not use DEET on them because they will lick it off and become sick. Use citronella oil, lemon oil or garlic. There are plenty of others as well, but they are not as effective or as long-lasting as DEET.

If you are barbecuing, and who would not be, be wary of meat, particularly chicken and pork. If the meat is frozen, thaw it gradually and keep it in the fridge until minutes before you are going to cook it.

The risk zone is between 40-140F, when bacteria will grow very quickly and flies will lay eggs in it. If you have to store the meat out of the fridge, store it ‘under water’, that is, in a marinade, so that flies can not get at it and it is out of strong sunlight.

Keep food and drinks apart, so that the fridge is not opened so frequently as to permit the temperature to rise above 40F. Use two sets of kitchen tools, one to deal with uncooked meat and fish and one to take cooked meat and fish off the flames otherwise you will contaminate the cooked food.

Use a meat thermometer to check that the food is cooked: 160F for meat and 165F for chicken. Throw away cooked food not eaten after two hours or after one hour if the ambient temperature is above 90F. If you would like to use marinade up on cooked food, boil it first.

Owen Jones, the writer of this piece writes on several topics, but is currently involved with the anopheles mosquito. If you would like to know more just go to our website at Mosquito Bite Swellings.

Insect Control

Thursday, July 21st, 2011

Mankind has to live with insects because we could not live without them. Insects are indispensable for cleaning waste both human and natural, but occasionally they are a nuisance and that is when we have to carry out some local, temporary insect control. This is normally when insects make a nuisance of themselves within our personal space.

The most common reasons of complaint are mosquitoes in the backyard and ants in the house. Enjoying a drink and a t?te-?-t?te in the backyard on a warm evening can be wretched if there are mosquitoes making relentless attacks and it is a constant worry if you always have to protect yourself and your food from foraging ants.

So, what can you do in the manner of insect control? There are several ways of countering mosquitoes and it is best not to rely on only one course of action. Occasionally, mosquitoes are just difficult for a couple days a year, but if they are a constant problem you have to do more.

The best method of control is prevention. Mosquitoes can breed in half-an-inch of water, so the first task is to eliminate their breeding grounds. Make certain that the drains, do actually drain away and that the gutters are not blocked. Then up-turn anything in the garden that can hold water: flower pots, buckets, containers and boats etc or sheet them over.

If you have a water feature put guppies or goldfish in it, because they like to eat mosquito larvae. This ought to almost solve your difficulty, but a couple of mosquitoes will still come in from next door, so as dusk is falling, hang one of those fly zappers near where you sit.

They have a black or ultraviolet light within an electrified coil and are very efficient. Hang one about six or seven feet off the ground. Some devices claim to be able to clear half an acre of airspace.

Finally, on a very local level you can put insect repellent on your skin or / and garments and keep a tennis racquet style insect zapper for the one or two persistent mosquitoes.

Ants will come into your home to live occasionally, but usually they have a nest outdoors but they have found a good, regular source of food in your house, so they have added it to their list of places to visit every day.

So, think about your house carefully, is it a bit grubby? Do you often leave food out? Do you do the washing up regularly and do you wipe the work surfaces down often? A small sticky patch of sugary water can feed a host of ants all day, so your kitchen does need to be kept extremely clean.

If that is not the cause of their visits, you will need to find their nest. That is not difficult, merely follow a line of ants back to their nest which is probably a hole in the ground. Buy one of those poisons which kills by poisoning and by contact. Place some on a bit of tile of glass and leave it outside their nest.

The ants will consume it and die and get it on them and die. They will take it back inside and give it to the others who will die and they will get groomed by their comrades, who will also get it on them and die. This process usually takes a couple of weeks to a few months, but you will see a large drop in ant numbers within a week.

Owen Jones, the author of this piece writes on several subjects, but is currently involved with finding a home remededy for mosquito bites. If you would like to know more, please go to our website at Getting Rid of Mosquito Bites.

Studying Insects

Tuesday, July 19th, 2011

The study of insects is called entomology. Entomology is a sub-section of biology and is one of the oldest sciences. Man has studied the habits of insects, normally with a view to getting rid them, since the first plague of locusts landed on primitive farmers’ crops tens of thousands of years ago. However, entomology was not really recognized and studied as a science until the Sixteenth Century.

Entomology has had numerous famous devotees but the most well-known was Charles Darwin. More recent entomologists are Karl von Frisch the Nobel Prize winner for medicine in 1973 and E. O. Wilson the two time Pulitzer prize winner.

Entomologists are also frequently credited with helping solve murders by studying the insects that are discovered on and in the dead body. This is quite possible and not merely a device used in Hollywood films.

The first thing to understand is that not all bugs are insects. For example, spiders are not insects, but many entomologists are not so strict and have an interest in arachnids (spiders), worms, slugs and snails.

All insects pass through several stages of life, but there are two types of insect development ’simple metamorphosis’ and ‘complete metamorphosis’.

The first sort includes most beetles and bugs like bed bugs. They are born as eggs and hatch into larvae (nymphs), which, whilst not perfect copies of their parents do look a bit like them

The second sort are also born as eggs, also hatch into larvae, but they look nothing like their parents - so dissimilar in fact that if you do not know what they are, you could not imagine. The larva then grows into a pupa when it appears to become dormant, this is not the case though, there is plenty going on and when it comes out from the pupal stage it is unrecognizable. Butterflies are like this.

If you want to study insects, you have to focus because there are at least 1.3 million species of insects that we have discovered so far and there are plenty more to name and classify.

You would be forgiven for imagining that these unknown insects, worms, slugs and beetles et cetera are all in remotest Africa or in thick jungles, but last year a carnivorous slug was found in a garden in the middle of Cardiff in the UK.

In order to study insects, you usually have to catch them without killing them. This means nets and traps. it is simple enough to get a butterfly net (or fishing net) and you can create your own pitfall traps for ground beetles. You will also need a good book to help you classify your find and a magnifying glass to be able to better see it.

One word of caution though: you may think that there are too many insects and that no one really cares about them, but this is not true. There are many insects in every country that are protected and you will be breaking the law by capturing them or hurting them, so the first thing to do is find out which ones you may study and which ones it is better to leave alone.

Owen Jones, the author of this piece writes on a number of topics, but is currently involved with finding a home remededy for mosquito bites. If you would like to know more, please go to our web site at Getting Rid of Mosquito Bites.

Arbovirus Encephalitis In New York In 1999

Tuesday, July 19th, 2011

In the late summer of 1999, there was an epidemic of encephalitis and meningitis in New York. To begin with, all the sufferers came from an eight square kilometer area centered on Queens and the Bronx.

Later, it spread further, although there were merely 59 cases and seven deaths - all in older individuals. 677 individuals were tested in the original survey, 19 of which tested positive for meningoencephalitis.

Going by the size of the population of New York, it was determined that between 3,500 and 13,000 people (average: 8,200) had been infected with West Nile virus. There were almost certainly far more than that, but serious indications usually only show in the young and the old.

Those in the in-between age group probably reckoned that they had a bad cold, which means that fewer than one percent of sufferers displayed severe neurological symptoms.

At first, it was considered whether this outbreak could be the result of an act of terrorism, but others suspected mosquitoes. Investigation concentrated on St. Louis encephalitis. However, when it was thought to test for West Nile virus, the number of cases increased.

The cause of the epidemic was soon confirmed to be a West Nile-like virus based on the identification of viral infection in human, avian, and mosquito samples.

This had not been expected because the New York outbreak was the first time that West Nile virus had been seen in the Developed world.

Then recent bird deaths were remembered. Large numbers of wild birds, especially crows, had died recently in the region and there were deaths at the Bronx Zoo of exotic birds as well.

Examination of the corpses of these birds showed traces of encephalitis which resembled West Nile virus (WNV). When doctors knew what to look for, they discovered comparable traits in the brains of the dead humans

The authorities immediately initiated widespread measures to control the numbers of Culex pipiens, the mosquito in the region that specializes in attacking birds. The public was informed and helplines were set up - by the end of September over 150,000 calls had been made.

The local authorities continued to spray and handed out 300,000 aerosols of DEET and 750,000 public health leaflets, which recommended tidying up the garden, not going out at dusk or dawn and covering up bare skin.

WNV is an arbovirus (arthropod-borne virus), which means that it is transmitted to humans by arthropods (insects), normally the tick or the mosquito. Previously, WNV had only been seen in Uganda, where it was first discovered and in isolated cases in Europe and South Africa.

A report concluded that it was “unclear whether the virus that caused this outbreak is a previously identified strain of WNV or a new variant”, however now recent evidence seems to suggest that a new mosquito - a hybrid of C. pipiens - living in the New York metro was to blame.

This is still not definite, but if it is the case, then the whole world ought to take care, because the New York ‘hybrid’ is related to the London Underground mosquito which inhabits nearly every underground railway station on the planet.

Owen Jones, the writer of this article writes on a number of topics, but is currently involved with finding a home remededy for mosquito bites. If you would like to know more, please go to our web site at Getting Rid of Mosquito Bites.

What Is The Study Called Entomology?

Sunday, July 17th, 2011

Entomology at its most simple is the study of insects and related animals. It is a subsection of biology and zoology. The animal class of Insecta is by far the largest group of animals in the world.

To give you an idea of how huge the issue is and how much work there is yet to be done, a bit over a million insects have been classified, but it is estimated that there are 30,000,000 more species to categorize.

Lots of these insects do not even have names yet and the habits of lots of those with names is still a complete mystery. This part of the study of entomology: the study of insects’ relationship with humans, the environment and other plants and animals is vital work.

This means that entomology has an effect on agriculture, biology, chemistry, criminology, forensic science, ecology, economics, food, forestry, genetics, health, trade, pharmaceuticals, robotics and veterinary medicine just for a kick off!

This means that there are many kinds of jobs in which a knowledge of entomology plays a useful role. For instance, if you are interested in insects and computers, you could develop computer programs for farmers to help them plan for all sorts of situations from attacks by pests to pollination by bees.

If you like to be in the field, you could work in forestry. If you like chemistry, you could work on chemicals like insect repellents

If you like maths, you could work on statistics, insect populations, growth predictions etc. In other areas you could work on the genetic engineering of plants to resist insect attack; work in a zoo rearing and feeding insects both for food for other animals and as exhibits or work in scenes of crimes using the insect life on a dead body to help supply proof for an investigation.

With so many sorts of careers on offer, it is simple to find a branch of entomology to interest you. There is also a limitless quantity of specimens - there are approximately 1,600,000,000 insects on the planet for each human being and there is no form of terrestrial life on the planet that does not depend on insects for its existence. It is also the most diverse life form on the planet.

A colossal problem that is growing year on year is the shortage of food, yet it is likely that 40% of all food produced is either consumed or spoiled by insects. If that single problem could be solved, it would give us a breathing space to work out the problem in the right manner. It is obvious that entomology will play a pivotal role in solving this difficulty.

Entomologists have a huge deal of work to do in safeguarding the environment and one of the most multifaceted environments is the rain forest. Approximately half the world’s species of plants and animals are discovered just in rain forests.

Lots of of these species have not been classified and they may hold the keys to curing a lot of of the most lethal diseases affecting mankind today.

A century ago, the diseases that killed most people worldwide were not the ones that we confront now and that is mainly because entomologists learned the insects that spread the disease (mosquitoes, ticks and fleas) and learned how to control them.

Nowhere near as many people die nowadays from malaria, Yellow Fever and dengue as they did 100 years ago, because we know how to control mosquito populations and people realize that it is the mosquito spreading the illnesses.

These are the life-threatening illnesses, but think about how much money we spend protecting our pets and livestock. And how much do individuals spend on killing cockroaches, silverfish and bed bugs?

There is a huge amount of money being spent on insects so plenty of jobs are out there for those with an fascination for bugs.

Owen Jones, the writer of this article writes on many subjects, but is at present concerned with getting rid of mosquito bites. If you would like to know more just go to our website at Mosquito Bite Swellings.