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Who is it? Help us identify our neighbors!

Community and ForumHow to get rid of insectsWho is it? Help us identify our neighbors!

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03.05.2007 14:32, Гурман

yes, damn, there is no time to do this, you should just call there and say - we have such an insect in the rooms razdelos

03.05.2007 14:47, Насекомовед

It is better to find time to work smile.gifout Ticks are not insects. In addition, they are able to carry pathogens of any infection. Check out, for example, a post on the Internet about a rat tick (do you have any rats in this building?).

03.05.2007 15:22, Гурман

no rats were seen

so far, I think that since images of this species are not found on the Web, it is not known about its danger, most likely it is some variant of saprophytes or spider mites - they are most similar to the photo, but we do not have plants

by the way, when the lemonade was left unfinished, these mites gathered on its neck

although they do not react to clean water

obviously, either sugar is important to them, or they were attracted to the flavor

and we will contact the sanitary inspection service...

03.05.2007 15:33, Насекомовед

 
and we will contact the sanitary inspection service...

Please tell us later what these "small animals"are.

03.05.2007 18:22, Zhuk

Nifigase che in Moscow is already found! eek.gif

03.05.2007 19:13, RippeR

Globally warming, however!

04.05.2007 8:29, Tigran Oganesov

Nifigase che in Moscow is already found! eek.gif
Duc classic, he's been here for a long time.
Likes: 1

04.05.2007 10:15, Насекомовед

Nothing out of the ordinary, really. In recent years, local populations of the greenhouse grasshopper Tachycines asynamorus Ad. have been very frequently found in Moscow in the basements of residential buildings and institutions (for example, information on the websites "Agrokon" and "Club of Macrophotography lovers"). It was probably introduced to Russia in the 19th century, where it was first discovered in St. Petersburg (Adelung, 1902) and Moscow (Boldyrev, 1911, 1915), inhabiting heated dark and humid rooms, as well as greenhouses and greenhouses, "causing harm to plants" (Beibienko, 1964)..
Likes: 4

04.05.2007 11:40, Гурман

I think the sanitary inspection station will not deal with the view to save time, but will simply destroy them

10.05.2007 12:10, AVA

At first, you wrote that they had a well-separated head, and I thought that most likely they could be kolembols, close to Sminturus. But there is no head in your drawing, and there are 4 pairs of legs. Thus, these are most likely ticks. More precisely, from the Gamazov group, and even closer ( but with a question) - house mites or, as they are also called, house dust mites.

Take a look to get started here:
http://www.oval.ru/enc/16544.html
http://www.referatu.ru/pictures_fail/16/737_1.htm

10.05.2007 12:15, AVA

Exactly collemballs. Nothing terrible, but indicate the need to bring the plumbing in proper condition. smile.gif

10.05.2007 17:08, Kaplya

Hello.
Help us identify the beetles. We live 2 months in a new building. In the toilet and bathroom, light brown very small beetles started up. The transition from the head to the torso is kind of beige in color. Like 6 light legs. They run fast. They look a bit like an ant. They only move on the floor and wall, but they don't climb high. They are mainly found in the seams between the tiles and next to the platbands. Help me identify them and tell me what to do with them.

Thank you in advance.

Pictures:
picture: 01.jpg
01.jpg — (3.7 k)

picture: 02.jpg
02.jpg — (2.36 k)

10.05.2007 20:58, Bad Den

It seems to be hay eaters, something like book lice (Liposcelis divinatorius)

10.05.2007 21:07, Kaplya

We only have them in the bathroom. The rooms don't seem to be there. And how to deal with them?

10.05.2007 22:01, Zhuk

Dichlorvos or another sprayer in my opinion.
Somewhere here they have already written about hay eaters.

This post was edited by Zhuk - 05/10/2007 22: 02

10.05.2007 23:15, Kaplya

Thank you. I found a similar topic about senueds. There is a very clear photo. These are definitely my beetles. Well, let them live. They don't strain you too much yet. I will periodically ventilate, and dry completely until it turns out. New building. Around the apartment just started to repair. I'll wait until the house is fully occupied.
Thank you all again.

10.05.2007 23:52, Bad Den

I'll wait until the house is fully occupied.

How insidious... lol.gif

11.05.2007 13:20, Aleksandr Ermakov

Definitely collemballs. "Black fleas in the bathroom" couldn't be better phrased. If very annoying, arrange for dryness (ventilation, etc.) .

11.05.2007 13:34, Гурман

At first I wrote this way, because I looked at it without a microscope

the hairs were not visible in the microscope, although the magnification is not so strong, or they could stick to the body because of the drop in which it was placed

20.05.2007 14:35, Каролина

I also have the same beetles.They bite.Very itchy.I work in a warehouse,there is a lot of dust.What to do?Who are they?

20.05.2007 16:48, Victor Titov

I also have the same beetles.They bite.Very itchy.I work in a warehouse,there is a lot of dust.What to do?Who are they?

I can't help you without a photo. A lot of dust, bites, itches... It looks like fleas. Are they small? Jumping?

21.05.2007 12:40, Гурман

on Friday, before leaving work, we sprayed all the places where we saw ticks with Raid spray

No one has seen a single instance yet

01.06.2007 9:45, Halfer

Hy.. I had a whole colony of collemballs in my bathroom sink..

01.06.2007 11:24, Atomic Kittie

Please help me, I can't find out what kind of animal lives in my house. Unfortunately, there are no photos. We have a private house. They live in our kitchen, I can't even determine where, I can't see specific places of accumulation, I only notice them when they sit on my feet and bite painfully. Small, black, the body is somewhere 1-1. 5 mm long, like the wings they noticed. They get on their feet, and when I try to catch them, they jump off and I don't even have time to see where they go. We also had ants, so I first raided the entire kitchen, then placed boric acid syrup with sugar in the lids, then generally dichlorvos the floor of the house was covered. There are no ants, but THESE jumping creatures remain. Help, tell me who it is and what to do with them? How to get rid of them?

01.06.2007 11:46, Tigran Oganesov

Are they flattened on the sides? Do you have dogs or cats? It looks like fleas when they bite.

01.06.2007 12:14, Dmitrii Musolin

fleas...

01.06.2007 12:21, Atomic Kittie

We bought a house recently and moved in recently, about 2 weeks ago, we have no pets. But the former owners had 2 cats and 2 dogs, they lived in the house, only the animals went to the toilet on the street.
They are flat like some

01.06.2007 12:23, Atomic Kittie

So what's there to do with them? Legs itch, bite painfully ... uuuu
weep.gif

01.06.2007 12:38, Tigran Oganesov

Well, exactly fleas, "inherited". They should be poisoned. Especially all sorts of baseboards, etc., where they sit.

01.06.2007 12:47, Atomic Kittie

Well, fleas, well, that's what I thought, just all I need is bedbugs, then something else.. So I decided to clarify. So what should I poison them with??????

01.06.2007 12:58, Tigran Oganesov

Yes, the same Raid, a brutal thing. Pickle well, just take a walk yourself at this time.

16.06.2007 23:37, Nebraska

Help with advice on how to get rid of larvae .. They appear every day for 5-10-20 pieces at any time of the day . Some are covered in hairs, some are not, all different sizes . They move fast. Segmented, different shades. At the end of the bull is a forked horn. First appeared in one comrat, now visible in others. Looks like living under baseboards ... The apartment is new. Really bought in addition to laminate flooring and skirting boards ? confused.gif

Who knows how to get rid of them, preferably without the use of chemicals. We noticed that there are more of them in the heat.
 the image is no longer on the site: ________________.JPG 
In the photo, the cell size is about 5 mm. They've just been captured... frown.gif

Pictures:
________________.JPG — (37.82к) 16.06.2007 — 30.06.2007

16.06.2007 23:54, Nebraska

I also wanted to add that the strange thing is that you can't see the host beetles of the larvae. No, you don't need them . Just weird.

17.06.2007 10:12, vilgeforce

A bug would be necessary. It would be possible to read about biology at Zhantiev's and choose ways to fight. But in any case, cleanliness is a guarantee of health: dust, crumbs and other similar things can serve as food for them.

17.06.2007 13:40, Nebraska

Thank you, according to Zhantiev, this is Dermestus maculats. It is not yet clear how to deal with it. It seems that the only way is to remove all the laminate and baseboards, thoroughly clean the concrete floor and cover with new material. The temperature outside is more than 30 degrees. This seems to encourage their activity. No beetles in sight. Perhaps the beetles remained at the base where the laminate was brought from.

17.06.2007 14:18, Zhuk

Beetles will soon appear, as the larvae will pupate smile.gif. Look for them on the windowsill. In my opinion, it is impossible to get rid of them completely.

17.06.2007 15:36, Bad Den

Beetles will soon appear, as the larvae will pupate smile.gif. Look for them on the windowsill. In my opinion, it is impossible to get rid of them completely.

Well, why
Bromomethyl, phosphine... Together with neighbors smile.gif
Likes: 1

17.06.2007 17:17, RippeR

dance on the laminate floor to beat them all smile.gif
Try different tools-Masha, raptors, dichlorvos, etc.

17.06.2007 18:20, Dmitrii Musolin

to be honest, it makes me happy if it's in LAMINATE FLOORING... Isn't it in the baseboard?
Likes: 1

17.06.2007 18:59, Nebraska

Maybe in the baseboard. It is also not wooden, but glued, approximately the same composition as laminate. Under the laminate is a synthetic lining. Under it, concrete is everything. What do they eat there ? I think that they brought larvae or masonry from the supplier's slush. And now the question is-can all the larvae be caught ? How many larvae are in one clutch and how quickly will the cycle pass to new offspring ?
Well, who knows if they are completely harmless ? Are they carriers of any infection ?

Today it is cooler-20 degrees and larvae do not appear. Maybe they leave after dancing on the laminate smile.giffloor So the idea was also already there, but thanks anyway ! There is no desire to use chemistry YET.

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