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What you Need to Know About Ticks
- By Steve Lum
- Published 01/31/2012
- Home Improvement
- Unrated
Steve Lum
Steve Lum began a professional career in pest control in 1986 where he worked as a termite sales inspector for 6 months. In 1987 Steve took a job as a pest control technician with Slug-A-Bug inc. Steve became the highest producing employee for Slug-A-Bug, every year for the next 16 years.
View all articles by Steve LumThe most frequent questions about ticks that pest control companies are
asked is how to identify them. When ticks are found after they have bitten
someone or something, they can appear quite different than what they would when
lying on the ground. When crawling, ticks will typically appear brown or black
with a pattern on their tear-shaped bodies. They are wider than they are thick.
While they are large enough to be spotted without magnification they are still
quite small - smaller than an apple seed. After biting though, they become
engorged with blood rather quickly. At this point, they may appear white or
silvery and round. However, males do not grow as much in size when engorged, as
compared to the females of the species.
The problematic parasites begin
as eggs, which are formed during mating. This will generally occur while the
male and female are on the body of the host animal. The female will let go long
enough to deposit her eggs elsewhere. A single female can lay up to ten thousand
eggs or more at once.
After hatching, the larvae must find a host. This
first ‘meal’ is integral, as it will provide them the nourishment needed to shed
their skin and move into the next stage of their life. The species has developed
the ability to withstand
Another advantage of the species is that most
varieties of ticks are able to feed on a wide variety of animals, including
birds, frogs, lizards, snakes, and nearly all mammals. Because they attach
themselves to migratory birds, tick populations can spread over large areas in a
relatively short amount of time.
The fear, when encountering a tick, for
most people is Lyme
disease. This condition, along with several others, can be carried by the
parasites between hosts. For this reason, a tick found on you, your family
members, or your pet should be saved in a plastic bag and taken in for testing.
Storing it in the baggie with a damp cotton ball will keep it alive longer. Also
be sure to keep an eye on any human who has been bit. A rash might not appear
until a few, or even a few weeks after the parasite has been removed. If this
occurs, medical attention should be sought out. It can be a sign of the onset of
Lyme disease.
Article Source: Slug-A-Bug
