Question 2: What if there are ticks at home? Why is there? Buy medicine, Flynn, and put it around the cat's neck.
Question 3: How to deal with ticks at home? 1. You can use ether to rub anesthesia, and then the bug can let go and fall.
2. You can also apply vaseline.
3. You can use tobacco oilseeds in rural areas, which can make it suffocate and fall off.
This tick can bite anywhere. If you bite in obvious positions such as arms and legs, you can also smoke with mosquito-repellent incense and fall off naturally after a while.
~ I hope the answer will help you. Please continue to "ask questions" if you have any questions!
It's not easy to answer questions and understand each other. Your adoption is my motivation. Thank you! !
Question 4: How to get rid of ticks at home? Hello, landlord:
Spray all parts of the house with pet insecticide, which is specially used for pet parasitic diseases (including ticks).
Ticks belong to Acari, tick superfamily. Adult worms have shield plates on their backs and strong crusting ability, commonly known as Ixodes, belonging to Ixodes; Commonly known as soft ticks without shields, they belong to the family of soft ticks. About 800 species have been found in the world, including about 700 species of Ixodidae, about 150 species of soft ticks and about 1 species of nano ticks. There are about 100 species of Ixodidae recorded in China, and about 10 species of Ixodidae. Ticks are temporary parasites on the body surface of many vertebrates, and they are the vectors and storage hosts of some diseases.
The worm is oval, with a flat abdomen and a slightly raised back when it is not sucking blood. The adult is 2 ~10mm long. After full of blood, it swells like red beans or castor beans, and the largest one can be as long as 30 mm. The surface is leathery and the back is covered with a shell shield. Insects are divided into jaws and bodies.
The development process is divided into four stages: egg, larva, nymph and adult. After sucking blood, adults mate and land, crawling in grass roots, roots, barns and other places. And lay eggs in cracks on the surface. Female ticks are * * * after laying eggs, and male ticks can mate several times in their lives. Eggs are spherical or oval, about 0.5 ~ 1 mm in size, yellowish to brown in color, and often piled up in clusters. Under suitable conditions, eggs can hatch into larvae within 2 ~ 4 weeks. The larva looks like a nymph, but its body is small and it has three pairs of feet. Larvae molt into nymph after 1 ~ 4 weeks. There is only one stage for Ixodes nymphs, and 1 ~ 6 stages for Soft Ticks nymphs. Nymphs have four pairs of feet and no reproductive holes. Then feed on the host, molt 1 ~ 4 weeks after landing and become an adult. The time required for Ixodes to complete the first generation life history varies from 2 months to 3 years. Most ticks take six months to two years. The life span of Ixodes ranges from 1 month to dozens of months. Due to repeated blood feeding and spawning, the adult life of ticks is generally 5-6 years to several decades.
Ticks have undergone host changes in their life history, which can be divided into four types according to the number of host changes: ① Single host ticks: female ticks lay eggs on the ground when they are full of blood. Such as ticks (ticks)
Microplus).(2) Double-host ticks: The larvae develop into nymphs in one host, and the adults are parasitic in another host. Such as Hyaloma.
Debris) .③ Three hosts ticks: larvae, nymphs and adults are parasitic on three hosts respectively. Such as Ixodes persulcatus and dust mites on grassland. More than 90% of Ixodes are three-host ticks, and most of the important vectors of tick-borne diseases are three-host ticks. ④ Multi-host ticks: larvae, nymphs and adults of all ages. Before laying eggs, female ticks need to look for host parasites to suck blood, and leave after each full blood. Soft ticks are usually multi-host ticks.
Ixodes lay eggs and reproduce in forests, bushes, open pastures, grasslands and mountainous soils. Soft ticks mostly inhabit barns of livestock, caves of wild animals, nests and crevices of human houses.
Female ticks lay eggs after fertilization and blood feeding, and Ixodes lay eggs once in their lives, and both of them are produced within 4 ~ 40 days after blood saturation, which can produce hundreds to thousands, depending on species. Soft ticks can lay eggs many times in their lifetime, 50 ~ 200 at a time, with a total of thousands.
Larvae, nymph and male and female adults of ticks all suck blood. Hosts include terrestrial mammals, birds, reptiles and amphibians, and some species invade the human body. Most species of ticks have a wide range of hosts. For example, Ixodes persulcatus parasitizes 200 species of mammals, 120 species of birds and a few reptiles, and can invade the human body. This is of great epidemiological significance. Ixodes generally invade the host during the day, and it takes a long time to suck blood, usually for several days. Soft ticks attack the host at night, and the blood-sucking time is short, usually from a few minutes to 1 hour. Ticks suck a lot of blood, which can swell several times to dozens of times in each development period, and the female Ixodes can even reach more than 100 times.
Ticks are often selectively parasitic on the host's parasitic parts, generally in parts with thin skin that are not easily scratched. For example, Ixodes persulcatus parasitizes in the neck, behind the ears, armpits, inner thighs, groin and other parts of animals or people. Ticks are mostly parasitic on the neck of cattle, followed by shoulder blades. Most of the Persian sharp ticks are parasitic on the wings and armpits of poultry.
Relationship with disease
1. Direct harm ticks have no pain when biting and sucking blood. However, due to the simultaneous penetration of claws and oral plates into the host skin, it can cause local congestion, edema, acute inflammatory reaction and secondary infection.
The neurotoxin secreted by saliva of some Ixodes in the process of biting and sucking blood can lead to the conduction disorder of host motor fibers, cause levator muscle paralysis, and lead to respiratory failure and death, which is called tick paralysis (tick paralysis
Palaysi & gt& gt
Question 5: There are ticks at home. Is there any way to clean up 1? You can rub alcohol on your body to make the tick's head relax or die. After a few minutes, take out the tick with pointed tweezers, hold the tick in your mouth and pull it out quickly.
2. Flea spray can be sprayed on infected parts, and ticks will die and can be removed the next day. Spray flea spray on the infected area regularly to keep the area clean.
3. It is not advisable to forcibly remove the "dog beans" bitten on the skin. You can drop a drop of iodine tincture, alcohol or ether on it, or bake it with a cigarette to make the "dog beans" fall off automatically.
4. Applying soapy water or sodium bicarbonate to the wound can relieve pain and reduce swelling.
Butox, also known as dipyridamole and fenvalerate, also known as mirex and fenvalerate, can kill ticks.
Question 6: How to disinfect and remove ticks at home? First spray Flynn spray to kill the tick, then use tweezers to pull the tick's leg out of the dog bit by bit, and finally take it off completely. Never pull them out at once! If not, go to the pet hospital and the doctor will help you.
Question 7: How to clean ticks in the house? Neither radar nor ordinary potions can completely clean up ticks, a stubborn pest.
"Flynn" and "Polk" can kill ticks. Fulaien has quick effect but high cost, and is generally only suitable for dogs with 1-2. It is too wasteful to use it in the yard. When directly sprayed on dogs, Polk can kill fleas, lice, ticks and other insects, and the kennel can be fully sprayed to play a preventive role. Prices within 50 yuan are relatively cheap. Taobao has both Fu Lai En and Bao Hong Xing Er Ke, which is cheaper than ordinary pet shops.
Butox, also known as dipyridamole and fenvalerate, also known as mirex, mirex and fenvalerate, can kill ticks.
Question 8: What should I do if I find ticks in the room? First of all, if I want to get rid of some insects you hate, I should know something about them.
Mite is an insect that emits Hantavirus. No one likes insects that emit viruses. So under what circumstances are ticks suitable for survival? To put it bluntly, it means changing your living environment. I don't know if there are many weeds where you live, but ticks with many weeds prefer them. Remove weeds from shrubs and clean livestock pens.
Or there are chemicals. Ticks can spray dichlorvos, malathion and fenitrothion in their habitats and wintering places.
Skin can also be smeared or sprayed with Luofushan herbal oil indoors, which can effectively prevent ticks from biting.
Also, you should protect yourself at ordinary times, wear five tight clothes, stockings and boots, and apply insect repellent to exposed parts.
Finally, I hope you can drive it away safely and adopt it!
Question 9: What if there are ticks in the room and bed? It's terrible. Ticks are sucking blood to death all the time. To kill ticks quickly, it is suggested that you use pyrethroids and fenthion to kill them. You must cure them completely! Because you have a baby at home, I don't recommend using this medicine to concentrate water. To use the finished product with proper proportion, we recommend the online "Bao Er Insecticide" or "Fenthion Finished Product". The baby's respiratory tract is fragile, so it is not necessary to use highly toxic drugs to solve ticks. Try to use drugs suitable for safe children's rooms. What should be reasonably applied on Taobao?
Question 10: What should I do if I find ticks at home? Hello! It is understood that adult ticks mainly suck blood from animals and then fall into the grass to lay eggs. When looking for a new host, larvae may parasitize passers-by and suck blood. Mites themselves are harmless, but the germs they carry are easy to cause disease. Symptoms such as fever, muscle aches and loss of appetite occur within two weeks after being bitten, and you need to seek medical attention in time. If your pet is bitten, please go to the pet hospital in time. Ticks are often attached to the scalp, waist, armpit, groin, ankle and other parts of the human body. Once it is found that the tick has bitten the skin, it can be smeared with alcohol to make the tick's head slack or die, and then the tick can be taken out with pointed tweezers, or the exposed part of the tick can be slightly scalded with cigarette butts and incense heads, so that its head can slowly retract by itself. Don't pull hard to avoid hurting the skin or leaving the tick's head in the skin. After taking it out, disinfect it locally with iodine or alcohol and observe your physical condition at any time. Whether ticks are found on human or animal body surfaces or floating on walls and floors, do not touch or even crush them directly, but use tweezers or other tools to clamp them and burn them; If the skin accidentally comes into contact with ticks, especially the effluent from crushed ticks, it should be disinfected locally with iodine or alcohol.