Firefly beetles are carnivores and eat insects (including other fireflies), insect larvae and snails.
70% of homeowners view bed bugs as a nuisance pest, while 20% term them a disease threat.
When forming a new colony, flying male and female "swarmer" termites break off their wings, enter wood through a crack or hole, mate and begin feeding.
The total weight of all of the termites in the world is greater than the weight of all the humans in the world.
Head lice are not necessarily present due to neglect, unsanitary living conditions, or any kind of abuse.
Ants cannot chew their food. They move their jaws sidewards, like a scissor, to extract the juices from the food.
The world's largest roach (which lives in South America) is six inches long with a one-foot wingspan
A female housefly can lay up to 600 eggs in her short lifetime.
10% of the world's animal biomass is composed of termites.
Approximately 25% of homeowners surveyed perceived ants, termites, and ticks as difficult to control.
Rats contaminate and destroy enough food worldwide each year to feed 200 million people.
The German cockroach is not really German. In fact, the Germans call it the Prussian cockroach. It is thought to have originated in Southern Asia.
Mice can fit through an opening the size of a nickel.
The Madagascan Hissing Cockroach is one of the few insects who give birth to live young, rather than laying eggs.
A single colony of Formosan termites could eat the whole structure of a home within two years.
Men claim their number one pest concern to be termites (24%) while women put spiders as their number one pest concern (16%).
Fire ants continue to move and infest more and more of the country. The entire pacific coast is ripe for infestation
Crickets are active at night and are attracted to light.
While most beetles are not toxic to humans, warehouse beetles have small hairs on their abdomen that can irritate your mouth and digestive tract.
Unlike bees, a wasp's body is smooth and has no hair.
Carpenter bees drill round holes about one inch deep into wood and then turn 90 degrees and drill galleries four to six inches long in which to lay their eggs.
When excited or disturbed, the acrobat ant workers run about with their abdomens held high above their heads.
Bees must collect the nectar from 2,000 flowers to make 1 tablespoon of honey.
Although the plague is often believed to be an historical disease, about 10-15 people in the U.S. contract this flea-borne illness each year.
Ticks have only six legs during their larval stage and eight legs during their nymphal and adult stages.
Fleas are vectors of Bubonic Plague, carried from rodents to humans when they suck our blood. In 14th century Europe, more than 1/3 of the continent died from the disease.
Black widow spider bites can cause intense pain and stiffness, occasionally followed by muscle spasms, abdominal pain, chills, fever and difficulty breathing or swallowing.
To survive the cold winter months, many insects replace their body water with a chemical called glycerol, which acts as an "antifreeze" against the temperatures.
A cockroach that has just shed its skeleton is white with black eyes. After eight hours, it has regained its regular coloring.
As many as 100 people die as a result of bee and wasp stings each year.
A cockroach can hold its breath for 40 minutes.
A one-day-old baby cockroach, which is about the size of a speck of dust, can run almost as fast as its parents.
Merchant grain beetles prefer to attack boxes of cake mix, cereal, macaroni and cookies rather than grain, as their name implies.
West Nile Virus is the number one mosquito transmitted disease in the United States.
Firefly beetles use their glow to attract other fireflies. Males flash about every five seconds; females flash about every two seconds.
The brown-banded cockroach often hides her egg capsules, containing up to 18 eggs, in furniture.
Termites have the most uniform nomenclature of all living orders, all but six genera of the 283 genera in the order end in -termes.
In the United States, African-Americans rarely get head lice.
Cockroaches can live without food for one month, but will only survive a week without water.
Silk comes from the cocoons of the true Silk Moth. More than 25,000 cocoons must be unraveled to make a single pound of silk thread.
Given enough time, termites will feed until nothing is left of the wood but a shell.
No one knows exactly how long termite queens live, but many are known to live at least ten years and records of some long lived mounds suggest a longevity of over 40 years.
After mating, queen ants lose their wings and never fly again.
Crickets are omnivores and eat both plants and animals.
One female flea can lay about 18 eggs a day and just 20 fleas on a dog can produce 360 eggs per day and over 2000 eggs in a week.
Caterpillars may have over 4000 separate muscles. Humans have only 792.
The light deflected from an eye of a horsefly can form a rainbow.
Male silk moths can detect female moths up to several miles away.
Male mosquitoes do not bite humans, but rather live on plant juices and other natural liquids from plants and decomposing organic material.
Mosquitoes transmit some of the worst diseases known to man, including dengue fever, malaria, encephalitis, and yellow fever.
Mosquitoes can transmit West Nile Virus and encephalitis, both of which are relatively uncommon.
In 2005, more people in the South mentioned having problems with cockroaches (26%) than anywhere else in the country.
Bed bugs can live more than a year without eating.
All insects have a hard exoskeleton, six jointed legs, two antennae, compound eyes and a body divided into 3 main body sections - a head, thorax and abdomen.
Cicadas breathe through spiracles - small holes in the abdomen.
Unlike many other insects, all of the periodical cicadas in an area emerge from the nymph stage as a full-grown winged adult at once.
About 1,000 cases of malaria are reported each year in the U.S.
The average mosquito has 47 teeth.
Any water that stands for at least seven days can breed mosquitoes
In 2000, 59.4% of surveyed pest professionals received no bed bug calls. In 2004, 67.1% reported receiving bed bug calls. That's a 63.6% increase!
Cockroaches are believed to have originated more than 280 million years ago, in the Carboniferous era.
Crickets hear through their knees.
The largest butterfly species in the world is a "Birdwing" butterfly from the Solomon Islands, whose wings span twelve inches.
Cockroaches spend 75% of their time resting.
Bed bugs can withstand a wide range of temperatures from nearly freezing to almost 113 degrees Fahrenheit.
Bed bugs can ingest seven times their own weight in blood, which would be the equivalent of an average-sized male drinking 120 gallons of liquid.
A female flea may consume up to fifteen times her own body weight in blood each day, to support the huge production of eggs.
A firefly (or lightening bug) is not a fly at all - it is really a beetle.
Fleas leave little bites on exposed areas, ankles and wrists.
Formosan queens can produce up to 1,000 eggs a day.
In Mexico you might find "pulgas vestidas", or "dressed fleas" for sale. Fleas are dressed in tiny costumes and posed holding tiny loaves of bread, tools, or whatever.
While the plague is often thought to be an historical disease, about 10-15 people in the U.S. contract this rodent-borne disease each year.
A small portion of the population is allergic to fire ant stings and should see medical treatment immediately if stung.
Fire ants first entered the United States in the 1920s through the port of Mobile, Alabama.
Formosan termites originated in China and have only been in the United States for about 50 years.
One in five people surveyed fear pests.
The Head and Pubic lice are currently NOT known to transmit any diseases to humans, so they are not health threats in that way.
Each year in the winter, rodents invade an estimated 21 million homes in the U.S.
75% of households that experienced termites called a professional
Termites eat non-stop - 24 hours a day, seven days a week.
Termites are the most likely of all pests to be treated by a professional.
Termites cause as much as $5 billion in damage each year. Formosan termites alone cause over $1 billion in damage every year.
Subterranean termites are a concern in every U.S. state except Alaska.
There are about 10,000 different species of grasshoppers.
Mosquitoes that attack people in their own yard are usually breeding close by on the property or on adjacent properties.
More women than men say they are afraid of pests.
African weaver ants can haul prey weighing more than 1,000 times their own weight up trees to their nests mainly through the aid of large adhesive pads on each foot.
Earwigs hide during the day and feed on leaves, flowers, fruits, mold and insects at night.
A bed bug is brown before it feeds and afterwards turns reddish-brown.
Flea eggs will hatch on the ground, in nests, carpet, bedding, upholstery or cracks in the floor.
The largest spider in the world is a species of tarantula found in South America where one specimen had a leg span of over 11 inches.
There are about 2,000 known species of termites in the world.
Scorpions are carnivores and feed on mainly insects, such as crickets, moths and caterpillars.
When living on a person, an adult female mite can live up to a month.
Powderpost beetles larvae will tunnel into hardwood floors, wooden antiques and the like, turning the wood in its path into fine, powdery sawdust.
Because bed bug bites are painless, people often don't even notice there's a problem until the infestation is large.
One colony of Formosan termites can eat up to 1,000 pounds of wood a year, compared to the 7 pounds that native termites eat.
Body lice infestations spread rapidly under crowded conditions where hygiene is poor and there is frequent contact among people.
Body lice infestation is unlikely to persist on anyone who bathes regularly and who regularly has access to freshly laundered clothing and bedding.
Only 10% of homeowners nationwide feel that cockroaches are a threat to their family's health.
Among those experiencing the pest, mosquitoes are least likely to be treated by a professional.
Cockroaches have been implicated in allergy and asthma from people breathing in aerosolized pieces of their broken down exoskeletons/cuticles.
With Lyme disease, a tick-borne illness, about 30-50% of victims get a pinkish bull's-eye type rash but victims are more likely to feel like they have the flu.
Adult female mosquitoes can live up to four weeks if they have a food source, while males live less than a week.
Black Widow spider silk was used for making the cross hairs in bomb sites of World War II aircraft.
The abdominal area of the firefly beetle glows a bright yellow-green color. The firefly can control this glowing effect.
Only female bees and wasps can sting. Males do not have the egg-laying "ovipositor" that is modified as the stinger on female insects.
Bed bugs grow up to ¼ inch
Japanese beetles winter underground.
Mice feed 15-20 times a day.
There are about 500,000 species of beetles.
Of all the insects that jeopardize man's health, mosquitoes rank first.
Once away from the human body, mites do not survive more than 48-72 hours.
More people in the South and West report having problems with ants.
Mice can jump a foot high.
Other insects have long lived immature stages but termites appear to have the longest lived adult reproductive lives.
Insects have been present for about 350 million years, while humans have only walked the earth for 130,000 years.
There are 1,830 different kinds of fleas known throughout the world.
Termites are sometimes treated with bait traps, cylinders containing wood and slow-acting poison that are buried in the ground around the perimiter of a home.
The largest Formosan termite colony found in America had infested a public library in Algiers, La. It weighed 600 pounds and contained 70 million termites.
More than 2 million people in the United States are allergic to insect stings.
Cockroach allergens are derived from secretions, excretions, dead bodies, and associated debris.
About 400 people in the U.S. contract typhoid, a fly-borne illness each year. 75% of these cases are associated with international travel
Warning signs of drywood termites include discarded swarmer wings, gritty sawdust-like fecal pellets, and hollow wood.
Bed bugs draw blood for about 5 minutes before retreating to digest.
More than half of homeowners surveyed (52%) were concerned about pests causing illness and insect bites/stings to their family.
In most cases, mosquitoes must feed on an infected person in order to pass on disease. They transmit but seldom carry disease-causing pathogens.
Ants are able communicate with each other about danger and directions to food.
While their name may be misleading, pavement ants can also be found inside the home.
The large "bird spider" tarantulas of South America have been known to live over 27 years.
Detectable levels of cockroach allergens can be found in at least one location in 63% of all U.S. homes.
There were 2,700 reported cases of West Nile Virus, a mosquito-borne disease, in the United States in 2005.
Blacklegged (deer) ticks, carriers of Lyme disease, like to spend the winter nestled in the fur of a deer.
Wasps feed on sweet liquids, and some that have been feeding on fermenting juice have been observed, eventually, to get drunk and pass out.
Spring followed summer as the season of most concern for pests for 42% of homeowners
Honeybees have 2 compound eyes and 3 simple eyes, for a total of 5 eyes.
One pair of mice can produce hundreds of offspring in a year.
Cockroaches can withstand temperatures as cold as 32°F. In extremely cold places, however, they survive by moving in with humans.
Not all crickets have wings.
A queen bee can lay her weight in eggs each day, laying 1 per minute, all day and all night, for a total of 1,500 eggs in 24 hours, and 200,000 in a year.
One in every four animals on earth is a beetle.
There are 5,000 species of cockroaches worldwide.
In addition to Lyme disease, ticks can also transmit Rocky Mountain spotted fever, tularemia, relapsing fever and ehrlichiosis.
The most common pest of stored products found in the home and in grocery stores in the U. S. is the Indianmeal moth.
Scorpion babies crawl on top of their mother and live there for the first week or two, feeding on scraps of her catches.
If food becomes scarce, scorpion mothers have been known to eat their offspring when they are old enough to venture out on their own.
More women claim mosquitoes (24%%) had been problems in the past year, while more men cited cockroaches (16%).
On many butterflies the color is only an illusion. The color we perceive is created by refraction of the light as it reflects off the surface of the scale.
More human deaths have been attributed to fleas than to all the wars ever faught.
Three percent of the American population is allergic to a stinging insect's venom.
More than half of homeowners surveyed perceived spiders, mice/rats, and bees/wasps as not difficult to control.
Rats will eat just about anything, including decaying material.
Girls get head lice more often than boys, women more than men.
It doesn't matter if a room is dirty or clean. Bed bugs only care about a dark hole to hide in and access to humans.
Fleas can jump 7-8 inches vertically and 14-16 inches horizontally.
Filth flies can carry diseases such as E. coli, leprosy, typhoid and polio.
32% of households that experienced ants called a professional.
A mouse produces between 40 to 100 droppings per day, while a rat produces between 20 to 50 droppings a day.
Only 12% of homeowners surveyed say they are concerned about bed bugs.
Tick paralysis is a tick-borne disease that is caused by the toxins in tick saliva and can occur when the tick remains continuously attached for 2-7 days.
36% of homeowners surveyed said they had problems with spiders during the past year.
More than 500,000 people seek emergency medical help each year as a result of insect stings.
About one-quarter (24%) of homeowners surveyed believe the risks associated with pest infestations have increased over the past few years.
Conservative estimates place as many as 14,000 people each year in the U.S. bitten by rats.
Fleas can survive for months without feeding.
Scorpion stings are more dangerous for children and those with existing heart or lung problems.
Bed bugs leave a cluster line of itchy bites.
Wild and domestic rodents have been reported to harbor and spread as many as 200 human pathogens.
A cockroach can live a week without its head. The roach only dies because without a mouth, it can't drink water and dies of thirst.
A majority of homeowners report being concerned about ants.
Spider silk is extremely strong and extremely elastic. It may be stretched up to 25% of its own length.
Subterranean termites spend winters underground.
If crushed, the odorous house ant worker gives off a rotton coconut odor, hence it's name.
Mexican "Jumping" Beans jump because of a moth larva living inside each one.
Large numbers of fire ant stings can result in death.
Formosan termites, widely considered a "super" species of termite, because of the rate of destruction it poses, currently infest 11 states.
The Africanized Honey Bee (a.k.a. "killer bee") have been known to chase people for over a quarter of a mile once they have gotten excited and aggressive.
House mice are said to be the most common mammal in the U.S.
36% of the reported Hantavirus cases in the United States have resulted in death. Hantavirus is a virus spread by rodents.
Cockroaches can run up to three miles in an hour.
There are about 200 species of filth flies.
American cockroaches can produce 6-14 egg capsules, each containing 14-16 eggs each, in one mating season.
In addition to being found in beds, bed bugs can also be found in carpets, under wallpaper, behind baseboards, and in small cracks and crevices throughout a room.
It can take up to 3 years for a varied carpet beetle to grow from an egg to an adult, and adults only live between 13-44 days.
Female German cockroaches can produce one egg capsule every 20 to 25 days. Each capsule contains from 18 to 48 eggs.
Scorpions give birth to live babies, several dozen at a time.
There are 22 varieties of earwigs in the United States but more than 1,000 species worldwide.
The top four pests of concern for users of professional pest control were Ants (75%), Spiders and Termites (56%), and Cockroaches (48%)
Flea larvae feed on undigested organic matter, particularly the feces of adult fleas, which contain undigested blood.
Most cockroach species live in the tropics but they can make their home all over the world, including the North and South Poles.
Adult German cockroaches can live up to one year.
Poisons in the body of a Monarch butterfly are sufficient to kill a small lizard and cause severe vomiting in large birds.
House crickets can damage silk, woolens, paper, fruits and vegetables.
Bed bugs are now found in all 50 states
More people in the West mentioned having problems with rodents such as rats and mice (35%) in the past year.
Rats can squeeze through a space as small as a half dollar.
The deer tick is smaller than a pinhead
In the U.S., rodents try to come inside from October through February for warmth and food.
Bed bugs can lay 1-5 eggs in a day and can lay up to 500 eggs in a lifetime.
The American cockroach has shown a marked attraction to alcoholic beverages, especially beer.
Mosquito-borne disease is likely the number one cause of death in developing countries.
The front claws of scorpions are actually modified parts of their mouth.
An ant can lift 20 times its own body weight. If a 175-pound man had the comparative strength of an ant, he could lift four tons.
Problems with spiders were higher in the west (49%)
Fire ants currently infest 14 states in the southern portion of the U.S.
Of the 20 million people in Latin America who are infected by Chagas disease, a serious kissing bug-borne illness, about 50,000 die annually.
Fleas can remain frozen for a year and survive.
56% of homeowners surveyed said they have had a problem with ants in the past year.
Head lice make no distinction between races, sexes, or economic classes of people.
The total distance traveled by all the bees to create a pound of honey may equal twice the distance around the world.
Flies taste what they walk on.
The kitchen is the area of most concern for pests among homeowners.
An estimated 15% of all new homes have serious structural defects and damages, which may include termite damage.
A mature Formosan termite colony can number in the millions.
A female house mouse can give birth to up to a dozen babies every three weeks. Imagine having as many as 150 babies a year!
Its flat shape allows cat fleas to easily pass between the hairs of animals.
Cat fleas attack both cats and dogs.
Drywood termites feed only on dry wood, including wooden doors, porches, cupboards, and entertainment centers.
The cicada has the longest life cycle of any insect, ranging from 2 to 17 years.
The long cerci, or clippers, on their backsides can easily identify an earwig.
Newborn German cockroaches become adults in as little as 36 days.
Males of most cricket species make a loud chirping noise by rubbing their forewings together.
Hantavirus is a viral disease that may be contracted through direct contact with, or inhalation of, aerosolized infected rodent urine, saliva, or droppings.
Bed bug hatchlings are so small they can pass through a stitch-hole in a mattress.
Ants are the #1 nuisance pest in the United States.
Flies use the hairs that cover their bodies to feel, taste and smell.
The use of DDT nearly wiped out bed bugs at the end of WW II but experts believe that the ban of DDT in 1972 has contributed to the resurgance of bed bugs.
Kissing bugs are not as romantic as their name implies. Rather, they bite and suck blood while their human or animal host is sleeping.
Over 5 million children are sensitive to cockroaches.
Honeybees may make 10,000,000 trips to gather enough nectar to make a single pound of honey.
There has been a 500% increase in bed bug infestations reported since 1999
The German cockroach is the most common cockroach found in and around apartments, homes, supermarkets and restaurants.
Earwigs got their name from the myth that they crawl into sleeping people's ears and tunnel into the brain.
The queen of a certain termite species can lay up to 40,000 eggs per day.
There are about 91,000 different species of insects in the United States. In the world, some 1.5 million different species have been named.
20% of homeowners surveyed said termites were their main pest concern.
A rat can swim for 3 days before it drowns.
A female tarantula found in South America weighed 1/3 of a pound, and had fangs 1 inch long.
Spider silk from some House Spiders has been used to help stop bleeding from wounds, by placing a mat of silk over the wound
More than half of homeowners surveyed (53%) were concerned about pest damage to their homes and property.
Formosan termites are the most destructive termite in the world.
Odorous house ants may be difficult to control because they don't feed much from baiting stations.
When searching for food sources a honeybee may travel up to 60 miles in a single day.
Spiders don't get caught in their own webs because they have self-oiling legs.
In many species of wasps, fertilized eggs become females, while unfertilized eggs become males.
Lice are most easily spread among children who share clothing, hats, or very close contact in these classroom settings.
11% of women homeowners believe bed bugs are a threat to their families' health.
48% of homeowners believe there is an increased need for professional pest control services. Most of the remainder (44%) feel the need is about the same as in years past.
Of some thirty or so insect orders, termites are the only one in which all species are categorized as highly social or "eusocial".
67% of homeowners are most concerned about pests in the summer
1 in 4 people are sensitive to cockroaches.
Termites burrow into wood to obtain food.