enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Mites of domestic animals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mites_of_domestic_animals

    Mites that infest and parasitize domestic animals cause disease and loss of production. Mites are small invertebrates, most of which are free living but some are parasitic. Mites are similar to ticks and both comprise the order Acari in the phylum Arthropoda. Mites are highly varied and their classification is complex; a simple grouping is used ...

  3. Sarcoptes scabiei - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sarcoptes_scabiei

    Sarcoptic mange affects domestic animals and similar infestations in domestic fowls cause the disease known as "scaly leg". The effects of S. scabiei are the most well-known, causing "scabies", or "the itch". The adult female mite, having been fertilized, burrows into the skin (usually at the hands or wrists, but other parts of the body may ...

  4. List of common household pests - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_common_household_pests

    The house fly is found all over the world where humans live and so is the most widely distributed insect. [1]This is a list of common household pests – undesired animals that have a history of living, invading, causing damage, eating human foods, acting as disease vectors or causing other harms in human habitation.

  5. Adactylidium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adactylidium

    Adactylidium is a genus of mites known for its unusual life cycle. [1] An impregnated female mite feeds upon a single egg of a thrips, rapidly growing five to eight female offspring and one male in her body. The single male mite mates with all his sisters when they are still inside their mother.

  6. Tetranychus lintearius - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tetranychus_lintearius

    Tetranychus lintearius is a species of spider mite known as the gorse spider mite. It is used as an agent of biological pest control on common gorse, a noxious weed in some countries. The adult mite is half a millimeter long and bright red. It lives in colonies in a shelter of spun silk spanning many branch tips.

  7. Pyroglyphidae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pyroglyphidae

    Other mites in this family feed on stored products such as grain, cereals, nuts, dried fruit, cheeses and pet foods, but only in conditions of high relative humidity. [4] The sexes are separate in this family. The female lays two or three eggs each day and these develop through several stages; larva, protonymph, trytonymph and adult. At 23 °C ...

  8. Mite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mite

    The microscopic mite Lorryia formosa (). The mites are not a defined taxon, but is used for two distinct groups of arachnids, the Acariformes and the Parasitiformes.The phylogeny of the Acari has been relatively little studied, but molecular information from ribosomal DNA is being extensively used to understand relationships between groups.

  9. Aceria anthocoptes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aceria_anthocoptes

    This mite normally spends the winter as fertilized female adults, remaining under bud scales of the thistle. They emerge in the spring. [5] They continuously reproduce during times other than winter, creating a new generation every two to three weeks. [5] Aceria anthocoptes mite feeds by sucking the contents of the leaf cells. [4]