Big Ugly

Big Ugly

Eradicating Dog Ticks Is A Big Problem

Dog ticks, or even more specifically brown dog ticks, start off as very small parasites looking for a blood meal. When first born, they’re very small and very hard to find. Throughout their life, they moult quite a few times and ultimately, at maturity, turn into the large, unappealing critters most of us identify. They are regarded to be the most prevalent tick found throughout the world.

A female dog tick feeds just once. Her body engorges to many times its original size. During this time, a smaller sized male tick attaches next to her for the purpose of breeding. The female will then drop to the earth and lay her eggs. She can easily develop 10,000 eggs at a time.

These particular baby ticks, or larvae, are from time to time called seed ticks as a result of their small size. They are really attracted to light, which makes them climb up virtually any structure they find. They wait around on their lofty perch, occasionally a blade of grass or a tree branch, for the odor of carbon dioxide. This gas is released in every single breath a canine (or human being) takes. After they smell the gas, they let go and drop onto the dog that is moving below them.

Once on the dog’s body, they crawl towards the neck, back, ears or in between the toes and attach themselves to the pet’s skin. They feed on blood for 2-4 days then fall off the pet to moult directly into a nymph phase. The second stage tick needs to in addition obtain a blood meal from a pet before falling off again to shed into an adult tick.

Due to the fact it’s quite a difficult task for such a small creature to get on a swiftly moving target such as a dog, ticks have remarkable survival rates. A dog tick larva can easily survive for up to 6 months without feeding. An adult tick can survive for 19 months. This actually explains exactly why, in properties that haven’t been lived in for a lengthy time, live ticks can still be picked up in the backyard.

Brown dog ticks bring about discomfort, especially if in large numbers. They will be observed in quite a few bushland locations and where other dogs have been located. Simply because of the huge number of eggs one female tick can lay, it’s very easy to see that they can be hard to eliminate as soon as they make it inside an environment. Prolonged survival rates paired with issues in finding and killing the ticks make them a challenge and a nuisance for many dog owners.

Management of these insects calls for treatment of both the pet dog and environment. Lots of different chemicals are offered but extreme caution ought to be taken not to overdose the pet with toxic substances. A careful, comprehensive program of removal and vigilance will eventually get rid of the problem.

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