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  4. Chiggers

Chiggers

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  • The Best Tick & Chigger Defense

    As warm weather arrives, so do annual infestations of chiggers and ticks. These pests can carry numerous diseases. There are several ways to counter these arachnids, allowing you and your pets to enjoy the outdoors. The best tick and chigger defense differs from one situation to another.

  • How to Treat Chiggers With Bleach

    If you are fond of spending time outdoors during the summer months, you have probably endured the wrath of chiggers. Chiggers are immature Trombiculidae mites that suck the blood of warm-blooded animals. Typically it is too late to treat chiggers once you begin scratching the areas where they've bitten you, but you can try and kill any remaining chiggers on your skin. Bleach is not normally recommended for contact with skin, but you can use it as long as you dilute it properly.

  • Will Sulfur Eliminate Chiggers in the Lawn?

    Pest control is important to well-maintained lawns, particularly if people and pets spend time on the lawn. Lawn pests sometimes include chiggers, the parasitic larval stage of a common mite in the genus Trombicula. Chiggers are nearly invisible nuisance pests that can cause itchy welts where they bite. While they do not transmit disease, they should be controlled for the comfort of anyone who frequents the lawn. Sulfur compounds are often recommended as chigger repellents, but there are some drawbacks.

  • How to Fumigate for Chiggers

    Chiggers present a problem that all homeowners want to avoid. A chigger is a very small pest that can cause very big problems, as its bite can make your skin extremely itchy and irritated. If you believe there are chiggers in your home, home insect foggers give you the option to fumigate yourself. You must exercise extreme caution when using these products. Note that chiggers rarely choose to live indoors, but house plants can provide refuge for a small population.

  • How to Determine if it is a Chigger Bite

    When participating in outdoor activities such as hiking, boating or picking fruits, a person may be bitten by a series of insects. Determining the proper treatment for the bite may be dependent upon the insect that caused the bite. Chiggers are the larvae of a common mite usually found in heavily wooded areas. Their bites are irritating to skin and cause intense itching. Treating the bites from these insects should include washing the affected area and applying an anti-itch lotion. To prevent infection, bite pustules should not be popped.

  • Difference Between a Mosquito & a Chigger Bite

    The lazy days of summer often bring with them the constant threat of bites from various insects. Chiggers and mosquitoes are among the most common biting insects, but their bites can be difficult to differentiate. If you want to eradicate biting insects from your yard or treat the bite, though, it's important to know what bug bit you.

  • How to Cure Red Bugs

    Red bugs, also known as chiggers or harvest mites, are a common affliction to people who enjoy spending large amounts of time in the woods or other wild outdoor areas. Resembling red spiders, adult chiggers lay eggs that become parasitic larvae. These larvae secrete a liquid into the skin that causes inflammation, feeding and concealing the larvae until they have sated their voracious appetite. Prevention is the best way to address chiggers, but it is also possible to reduce the effects of their bite.

  • How to Remove Chiggers

    Chiggers are a larval form of a genus of mites called Trombiculidae, from the arachnid family. The little red creatures are barely visible, which makes them hard to detect and remove. You are most likely to detect chiggers from their bites, which begin as a red welt that becomes maddeningly itchy. The itchiness lasts for days, even weeks and usually starts at the ankles and spreads up the legs. Prevent chigger bites with thick clothing and mosquito repellent. Be sure to wash clothes when returning from long walks or hikes.

  • What is the Difference Between a Chigger & a Tick?

    Ticks and chiggers are easily confused. Both bite humans and leave itchy marks behind, but chiggers are the larvae of harvest mites and unrelated to ticks. The two types of arthropod differ in other ways, such as feeding habits and the diseases ticks carry.

  • Chiggers Vs. Tick

    Ticks and chiggers are both biting insects that live in tall grasses. However, these bugs are very different and it is important to know how to deal with them if you are bitten.

  • Chigger Skin Irritation

    Chiggers are a type of mite that bite skin and feed on flesh as they grow in their larval stage. Once they reach full adulthood, they feed only off the ground. When a chigger bites your skin, it causes an allergic reaction and irritated itching for several days.

  • How to Get Rid of Chiggers in a Feather Mattress

    Chiggers are an extremely small form of mite that are parasitic on humans. Chigger bites can cause red welts, itching, rashes, infections and occasionally fever. If chiggers have infested your feather mattress, you should avoid using insecticides containing strong chemicals in your sleeping environment, since doing so could pose risks to your health. Steam cleaning is a natural way to disinfect and sanitize your feather mattress, and kill the chigger infestation.

  • How to Avoid Chiggers

    Avoid chigger bites by wearing long clothing and/or chemical products with DEET. Prevent chiggers with tips from a firefighter in this free first aid video.

  • How Does a Chigger Harm Humans?

    Chiggers, otherwise known as red bugs, attach themselves to humans' skin. There is a common misconception that chiggers go under the skin, which has led to the home remedy of covering the red area with nail polish in an effort to suffocate the bugs. Instead, chiggers attach themselves to the host and inject a secretion that breaks down the skin cells. The red parasites then drink the cells. The secretions from the chigger contain enzymes that cause the irritation on the skin creating redness, itching and swelling.

  • About Chiggers

    Have you ever spent a lovely day outdoors, sitting on rocks, dangling your feet in a stream or sprawled in a grassy field? Those kinds of days are great memories unless when you get home you find yourself covered with raised red bumps that itch badly. Probably the problem is chiggers.

  • How Does a Chigger Live?

    Adult female chiggers will find a sheltered place to lay their eggs in the early spring, typically where vegetation is heavy and the area is damp. The ground temperature needs to be at least 60 degrees Fahrenheit on a regular basis in order for them to lay their eggs. They can lay up to 15 eggs per day. The eggs will produce six legged, parasitic larvae. It is the larvae that feed on flesh, not the adults.

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