|
Household Pests
Household insect pests have developed in part from the availability
of food sources. Just as the Colorado Potato Beetle populations
exploded when potatoes were planted in large acreage, pests in
households also flourished with the storage of dried organic material
in houses, such as grains, flour, dried fruits, and even dried
dog food.
Some common insect pests in households:
-- Carpet Beetles. These tiny insects are quite destructive in
the larval stage on nearly anything organic. Heavily infested food
should be discarded. Lightly infested food may be frozen for a
few days and then used. Pantry shelves should be vacuumed and cleaned
thoroughly. Carpet beetles also infest carpets, of course.
-- Pantry Moths. There are several kinds of moths that appear
in pantries to feed on all kinds of stored foods, the Indian Meal
Moth perhaps being the most common. They may be controlled to some
extent by using sticky trap boxes that contain pheromones as attractants.
-- Silverfish. These insects are a wingless, primitive type that
live in areas of moderate humidity and darkness. They are a particular
threat to paper and paper products, and the glue used in book and
magazine production. Silverfish are able to extract nutrients from
the cellulose fibers in paper products.
-- Cockroaches. There are thousands of cockroach species in the
world, but only a handful that are pests. Control measures commonly
involve sprays or dusts. Sprays are easier to apply, but dust will
get into tight areas where cockroaches live. Control is enhanced
if one cleans the area before applying chemicals.
-- Termites. This group of insects is the least commonly seen
of all the household pests. They infest wood, and must rely on
protozoa and bacteria in their guts to break down the cellulose
of the wood. Recent studies indicate that termite digestion produces
large quantities of methane gas (as flatulence), which, because
of the large numbers of termites, affects world ecosystems.
-- Bed Bugs. Fortunately, bed bugs are no longer common as pests
in households in the United States. In earlier decades, these blood-suckers
were an annoying problem, and would also be found in the seats
of trains, trolley cars and theaters. The origin of bed bugs appears
to be from parasitism on bats in caves. The movement of early humans
into caves occupied by bats started the association with bed bugs
that bothered humans for many centuries.
-- Carpenter Ants. The Black Carpenter Ant, Camponotus pennsvlvanicus,
is a problem in many households in the Pacific Northwest and the
Northeastern United States. They originate from large nests in
dead or dying trees, then enter houses to start secondary nests,
usually in walls. Sometimes homeowners are alerted to their presence
by the sight of small piles of sawdust. Blockage of entry places
and the use of baits will usually control these large pests.
-- Clothes Moths. Adults of this species do not feed, but damage
to clothes is caused by the larvae, which avoid light and live
inside silken cases or webs. Wool, hair, fur and feathers are eaten.
Dry cleaning kills the larvae, and storage in airtight boxes or
bags will protect clothes.
|