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ImageHot Peppers Tested as a Rodent Deterrent
Hot Peppers Tested as a Rodent Deterrent
MISSOULA, Mont. — Researchers in Montana are testing hot peppers to see if they will deter deer mice from eating grass seeds, the Helenian.com reports.
Dean Pearson, a research scientist with the U.S. Forest Service’s Rocky Mountain Research Station, is toying with ways of attaching the powder derived from the bhut jolokia pepper – one of the hottest known to man – with the seeds of native plants used in restoration work.
“I’ve done work to show that mice can have a big impact on seeds,” said Pearson. “When they put the seeds down to plant, the rodents come and eat them up. So we’re looking to use a cheap and dirty method to protect seeds from mice.”
That cheap and dirty method involves the bhut jolokia pepper, which is used in parts of India to keep elephants away. It also has been considered as a non-lethal weapon to flush criminals and terrorists from hiding places.
One man who ate a bhut jolokia pepper on a dare allegedly spent hours vomiting, sweating and hallucinating. Pearson said such reactions to the pepper pertain to mice and men alike, along with all other mammals, making it an effective deterrent.
Peterson added that he and his team have experimented with waxes and oils, each of which have shown effectiveness, but also have drawbacks.
Click here to read the entire article.
Source: helenair.com
Posted in Hot Peppers Tested as a Rodent Deterrent
Tagged bed bug control, commercial pest control, Exterminator, Hot Peppers Tested as a Rodent Deterrent, McCauley Brothers Pest & Termite Services Blog, Pest Control, Pest Control Services, rat control, Rodent Control, San Fransisco Pest Control, Spider Control
Avoiding the Ravages of Pests During the Zombie Apocalypse
Avoiding the Ravages of Pests During the Zombie Apocalypse
Pest management professionals Rose McMillan and Allie Taisey contributed the following article on pest preparation that is running as part of CDC’s Zombie Preparedness campaign.
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Editor’s note: The Centers for Disease Control and Preparedness is in the midst of a Zombie Preparedness campaign — a fun new way to engage audiences with preparedness messages. The following article — a collaborative effort from pest management professionals Rose McMillan and Allie Taisey — part of this campaign. To learn more visit about CDC’s Zombie Preparedness campaign, visit www.cdc.gov/phpr/zombies.htm.
Have you ever watched a zombie apocalypse on screen and wondered how the characters might deal with the mundane issues that come up in everyday life? For example, how come no one’s hair grows longer and men don’t have long beards? Being a pest control professional, I also think about the not-so-glamour’s realities of pest control in an apocalyptic world.
Yes, surviving the zombie apocalypse is going to be tedious. But it will be even worse if you fail to take precautions against pests. After all, you won’t be able to call up your local pest control company or stop at a store for pest control supplies. As you prepare for the inevitable zombie apocalypse, it’s imperative that you consider the risks of pests thwarting your best-laid zombie apocalypse plan.
I’ve created the following pest control guide to surviving the zombie apocalypse:
Keep Your Food Safe
Food is going to be hard to come by once zombies start roaming the earth. Protect your provisions from pests. Certain items, such as canned goods, will stay good for a long time without any potential pest ramifications. Cereal, grains and other similar foods are a completely different story. Before you store these items in preparation of the ever impending zombie apocalypse, you should remove them from their regular packaging and place them into airtight containers. Doing this will keep moisture out, and it will also keep your food from being infested with roaches or meal moths. Hard plastic containers are a safer bet than bags because they will also keep rodents out too. To make it easy to move in a hurry, all of your food containers can be placed inside of a tote with handles. Even with these precautions in place, you should still place some pest monitors and do a regular inspection of the area where you are storing your apocalypse supplies, just to be on the safe side.
Keep Your Blood to Yourself
If your apocalypse plan involves heading to the woods, then you must avoid areas that have stagnant water. These waters are a breeding ground for mosquitoes. The last thing you want to deal with while a zombie is chasing you is the fever, body aches, and disorientation that can accompany Dengue and the West Nile Virus.
Avoiding Bed-Bug-Induced Insanity
Sufficient sleep is essential for peak mental performance, a major factor in emergency survival.
Unfortunately, bed bugs are likely to proliferate during a zombie apocalypse, robbing you of sleep and sucking your blood—which will doubtlessly attract zombies. If you perform a basic pest inspection and notice bed bugs, their shed skins, or stains on your bedding and furniture, call a professional before they close their doors and head for the hills. Something you should do before a post zombie apocalyptic world, is install monitors for bed bugs and inspect often.
Pack if Possible
If you are allergic to bee stings, make sure that you have some EpiPens in your emergency bag. A good repellent isn’t a bad idea either. No matter how much of a thriller shows like the “Walking Dead” may be, mother nature will continue to exist. That means the ticks, biting flies, chiggers and gnats will be competing with the zombies to find you.
Exclude the Zombies and the Pests
Before a zombie apocalypse happens, seal crevices around the outside of your house, make sure screens are in place, and install door sweeps. Any gap that could fit an insect or mouse should be covered to prevent the pests from getting in and your sweet-zombie-attracting odor from getting out. While you’re at it, trim any bushes and trees that are touching your home. You’ll take away the bridges that pests use to get on your home AND reduce the number of places where zombies can hide.
As you can see, pest control during a zombie apocalypse is critical, but doable. With preventative measures and a regular pest inspection routine, you’ll have a much better chance of getting through the zombie apocalypse alive instead of undead.
Posted in Avoiding the Ravages of Pests During the Zombie Apocalypse
Tagged Avoiding the Ravages of Pests During the Zombie Apocalypse, Exterminator, McCauley Brothers Pest & Termite Services Blog, McCauley Brothers Termite & Pest reminds people to take extra precautions to guard against stinging insects, Pest Control, Pest Control Services, San Fransisco Pest Control, Spider Control
Death Toll From WNV Tops 200
Reuters.com: Death Toll From WNV Tops 200
The U.S. outbreak of West Nile virus has killed 219 people this year, after another 36 deaths from the mosquito-borne disease were reported last week, government figures showed Wednesday.
In what is the second-worst year on record for the disease, the total number of cases of West Nile virus across the United States grew to 4,725, with 194 new cases reported, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Although the pace of new cases has slowed since the outbreak’s peak in the late summer, new cases continue to be reported, particularly in states where warm temperatures persist. This year’s outbreak has trailed only 2003 in total cases.
Just over half of the cases reported to the CDC this year have been of the severe neuroinvasive form of the disease, which can cause meningitis and encephalitis.
The death toll from West Nile is now the highest since 2003, when 264 deaths were reported. The highest number of deaths from West Nile was 284 in 2002.
CDC officials have said deaths often lag weeks to months from the time of infection because of lingering illness.
Almost 70 percent of the cases have been reported in eight states: Texas, California, Louisiana, Mississippi, Illinois, South Dakota, Michigan and Oklahoma.
More than a third of all cases have been reported in Texas, with Dallas-Fort Worth at the center of the outbreak.
The Texas Department of State Health Services has reported 1,683 cases and 77 deaths, including 915 cases and 36 deaths in the Dallas-Fort Worth area.
A 520-million-year-old fossil has provided evidence that complex brains evolved much earlier than previously thought
A 520-million-year-old fossil has provided evidence that complex brains evolved much earlier than previously thought. The 7.6-centimetre preserved skeleton belonged to Fuxianhuia protensa, an extinct invertebrate related to today’s spiders and insects, and contains remnants of optic nerves connected to a three-segment brain. This is the earliest known fossil to show a complex brain, according to the paper published in Nature.
Read more: http://bit.ly/R0FQCu
Tagged A 520-million-year-old fossil has provided evidence that complex brains evolved much earlier than previously thought, Exterminator, McCauley Brothers Pest & Termite Services Blog, McCauley Brothers Termite & Pest reminds people to take extra precautions to guard against stinging insects, Pest Control, Pest Control Services, San Fransisco Pest Control, SF bed bug control, Spider Control
Earth’s Most Extreme Insects
Entomologists at the University of Florida scoured the literature to come up with a list of insects that were the coolest, fastest, largest, longest, loudest and brightest. They also chose more unusual champions: best imitator, least specific vertebrate bloodsucker and most spectacular mating just to name a few of them. Wired Science put together a list of 40 of their favorites, all which have their own allure to them: Earth’s Most Extreme Insects.
Moth that looks like a poodle has Internet abuzz (Bizarre photos)
Moth that looks like a poodle has Internet abuzz (Bizarre photos)
By: David Strege
The first word that comes to mind when casting your eyes upon this photo of a bedazzling insect labeled the Venezuelan Poodle Moth is Photoshop. Really? A moth that looks like a poodle? Eyelashes that Lady Gaga would envy? Seriously?
As it turns out, yes, it is real. The image that has been buzzing around the Internet in the past week–and has been greeted with a measure of skepticism–is very much authentic and comes to you via a zoologist from Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan.
Dr. Karl Shuker, a zoologist, science writer, and cryptozoologist (one who studies animals in order to evaluate the possibility of their existence), investigated the photo that is taking the Web by storm and discovered Dr. Arthur Anker, NUS, and his legitimate collection of 75 photos from Gran Sabana national park in Venezuela.
From the ShukerNature blog:
These photographs formed just one set of numerous spectacular images that Art has taken while visiting tropical rainforests and other exotic locations worldwide, and which he has placed in photosets on the Flickr website (his Flickr user name is artour_a).
The photo of the Venezuelan Poodle Moth–someone likened it to a Pokemon character–had been in mothballs since 2009 until someone plucked it out of Anker’s Flickr account and posted the funny-looking insect online within the past week or so. Not surprisingly, it subsequently took off in cyberspace.
Fortunately, Dr. Anker agreed to allow us to show you some of the other bizarre and funny-looking moths in that Gran Sabana collection, with his descriptions and our comments:
Description: “This one is very funny looking.”
Comment: It’s the Rickie Fowler of moths. You know, the PGA player who dresses like this.
Description: Psychophasma erosa.
Comment: For some reason (the name, maybe?), this moth reminds us of Lady Gaga.
Description: Arctiidae.
Comment: Believed to have had a cameo role in “The Dark Knight Rises.”
Description: Copiopteryx semiramis.
Comment: One wonders how this moth with a skeletal hipbone-like frame ever gets off the ground, let alone finds a way into an old suit hanging in the closet.
Description: Trosia.
Comment: The Santa Claus moth.
Description: Noctuidae.
Comment: If an ordinary housefly looked this good, we might not be so quick with the fly swatter.
Description: Pretty geometrid moth.
Comment: Each year, children worldwide wear these angel wings during Christmas pageants.
WAL-MART LAUNCHES CRUNCHY INSECT SNACK MIX
Wal-Mart is launching a new insect snack mix! Get the details in the article below.
WAL-MART LAUNCHES CRUNCHY INSECT SNACK MIX
Posted on Tuesday, March 15th, 2011 By Elsa Akesson
BENTONVILLE, AR – Wal-Mart has begun selling a crunchy snack mix that contains real insects!
Wal-Mart launched “Bug Crunch” a new line of salty, baked insects as part of their effort to branch out to new markets, as well as the larger global economy.
Wal-Mart admits they are taking a risk. But they are starting slow by launching just three flavors:
– Ranch Locust
– Barbeque Beetle
– Classic Cricket
Suzanne McNally, the head of Wal-Mart’s global nutrition initiative defended the decision to sell Bug Crunch at a press conference on Tuesday. “Insects are a great source of protein. We wanted to make them accessible to people who are looking for a healthy alternative to pork chops and ribeyes. Insects are a delicacy in many parts of the world. Now they are available for Joe the Plumber and people like him.”
Food critics all over the world received samples of each variety earlier this week. While none were willing to go on record before their official reviews were published, most agreed that Bug Crunch was an exciting addition to the world snack sector.
A dining critic at the New York Times requested to remain anonymous, but gave a brief review. “Plain and simple, they’re good. They have good crunch, a bit of salt, and a touch of earthy sweet. I will definitely serve the Classic Cricket at my next cocktail party as a bar snack paired with a fresh peach salsa or a spicy mango chutney.”
Expect to see all three flavors at your local Wal-Mart by the start of next week.