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  2. These Pictures Will Help You ID the Most Common Bug Bites and ...

    www.aol.com/pictures-help-id-most-common...

    Bed Bug Bites. What they look like: Often confused with mosquito bites, bed bug bites are small, red, puffy bumps that appear in lines or clusters, usually three or more. They can have distinct ...

  3. 11 common bug bites — and photos to help you identify them

    www.aol.com/news/11-common-bug-bites-photos...

    What they look like: Chiggers, a type of small mite, typically leave clusters of bites that are often very itchy. In many cases, chigger bites appear as small, red and itchy bumps. Sometimes, they ...

  4. Trombiculidae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trombiculidae

    Trombiculidae (/ t r ɒ m b ɪ ˈ k juː l ɪ d iː /), commonly referred to in North America as chiggers and in Britain as harvest mites, but also known as berry bugs, bush-mites, red bugs or scrub-itch mites, are a family of mites. [3] Chiggers are often confused with jiggers – a type of flea.

  5. Here’s How to Tell If You Have Chigger Bites or Scabies - AOL

    www.aol.com/tell-chigger-bites-scabies-163020938...

    That means they are more closely related to ticks than other biting insects like mosquitoes. Chiggers and scabies are the mites that bite. Yep, both of these little biters are actually mites ...

  6. Belostomatidae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Belostomatidae

    Belostomatidae is a family of freshwater hemipteran insects known as giant water bugs or colloquially as toe-biters, Indian toe-biters, electric-light bugs (because they fly to lights in large numbers), alligator ticks, or alligator fleas (in Florida). They are the largest insects in the order Hemiptera. [1]

  7. List of Lepidoptera of Michigan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../List_of_Lepidoptera_of_Michigan

    Download as PDF; Printable version; ... is a list of butterflies and moths—species of the order Lepidoptera—that have been observed in the U.S. state of Michigan ...

  8. Midge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Midge

    The Ceratopogonidae (biting midges) include serious blood-sucking pests, feeding both on humans and other mammals. Some of them spread the livestock diseases known as blue tongue and African horse sickness – other species though, are at least partly nectar feeders, and some even suck insect bodily fluids.

  9. Monochamus scutellatus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monochamus_scutellatus

    Monochamus scutellatus, commonly known as the white-spotted sawyer or spruce sawyer or spruce bug or a hair-eater, [1] is a common wood-boring beetle found throughout North America. [2] It is a species native to North America.