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Revision as of 15:36, 23 October 2017


Untitled

I don't believe this belongs in the category "pesticide" So I will remove the reference.

Merge

Shouldn't Mite be merged into Acarina and not the reverse? All mites are Acarina, but not all Acarina are mites (see ticks). It would therefore make more sense to expand the Acarina article and merge the mite one into it. --IronChris 18:32, 12 April 2006 (UTC)[reply]

No merge. Acarina are mite AND ticks. You don't want to merge all three. `'mikka (t) 21:41, 12 April 2006 (UTC)[reply]

I was just saying that because someone proposed a merge. I am aware of the importance of each, but I hope you'll agree with me, the Acarina article is simply ridiculous. One line on a whole order! So if no merge is done it would be great if someone with sufficient knowledge could expand it. --IronChris 22:04, 12 April 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Well, I added the second one :-) And while doing so I've found there is something to write into it, but I'd rather not.
On the other hand, it really makes sense to merge Acariformes, Parasitiformes, and Opilioacariformes into it, since the all of them must be discussed together because of some controversy as to their taxonomies. `'mikka (t) 23:13, 12 April 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I believe Mite should be merged into Acarina; according to the Encarta article on Tick, they are actually a group of mites, making "mite" synonymous with "Acarina". --Crustaceanguy 18:06, 31 August 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Searching the corresponding page in french I found no one. But i don't undersatnd here where do mite the domain of mites end in the Acari taxon... What are exactly mites ? All Acari except ticks ? What is the minimal descriptio of a mite ? --82.241.178.233 (talk) 17:49, 11 February 2015 (UTC)[reply]

Is there??

Is there a way to keep mites off of you? I stuck my hand in a Starling's nest, and I got a bunch of mites...

thanks, --e. 01:31, 13 May 2006 (UTC)

5% permethrin cream by prescription only in USA or over the counter in Canada- anonymous
Don't put your hand in starling's nests. - anaon  —Preceding unsigned comment added by 80.189.13.166 (talk) 19:40, 28 June 2009 (UTC)[reply] 

Yes, benzyl benzoate can really help. Sulphur is also useful, eg: 10% sulphur soap. Food grade diatomaceous earth also helps. A good IGR and knockdown painted on your house walls every 2 weeks or so until they are gone. Mites that infest humans are very hard to get rid of.

1.41.43.196 (talk) 16:28, 1 March 2012 (UTC)[reply]

I have just added some information about sulphur - the ancient remedy for mites. It should probably be noted that tea tree oil, neem oil, orange oil, eucalyptus oil and lavender oil are also known agents of mite destruction and repelling. In addition, alcohol, including methylated spirits, also kills mites. Rinsing the microfibre clothes in ammonia (15% to 20% NH3 to total volume of water used) is one of the few ways to effectively kill mites on microfibre mop heads and microfibre cloths.

It should also be noted that mites are extremely difficult to clean up. One of the few ways to clean a house is to use microfibre cloths to wipe walls, ceilings and any hard surfaces. Just about anything else won't actually pick the mites up.

It should also be stated somewhere here that standard pest control knockdowns such as Delta Force Plus[1] is only 80% effective and mite populations can quickly adapt. In addition, Insect growth regulators such as Starycide or Nylar are used to control a mite population. You can kill two birds with one stone by mixing an IGR into your mop bucket and wiping your walls with a microfibre mop. The mop picks up mites from the wall, the IGR peter pan's them, and the water drowns them. Always have two microfibre mop heads - leave the second one in the bucket and swap them. That way the mites get more time to die in the mop bucket.

If you buy a knockdown with deltamethrin then getting one with piperonyl butoxide helps for mite control.

49.178.3.93 (talk) 12:58, 28 March 2012 (UTC)[reply]

The fastest ways to get mites off your skin are:

  • Hot shower - preferably with sulphur soap
  • Dip a baby wipe into eucalyptus oil, then wipe across your skin. The mites will be stunned and picked up. You may need to use more than one wipe to get them all. Tea tree oil also works
  • Cover your skin with benzyl benzoate. The mites will either leave or die. Some people apply this daily for months to get rid of bird mites.
  • Cover your skin with petroleum jelly. The mites will be smothered. Note that this won't kill them instantly. It can take 10 to 20 minutes for them to die die die.
  • Cover your skin in baby oil.
  • Hot bath - preferably with epsom salts, tar based bath oil, or similar. The hotter the better - no cold water.
  • Cover your skin in powdered sulphur. A very long time ago people used to smother their skin in sulphur, wrap rags around, then sleep. You can also walk around during the day with sulphur in your pockets and on your skin
  • Smother your skin in Deep Heat - Only if DESPERATE .. or if you have been bitten too much and can't sleep for the pain.
  • 80% deet products[2]
  • Nit products

Any of the above to be executed with due care for your health. Seek medical advice. This information is only given as a guide. Anything you put on your skin you are potentially absorbing into your body. Be careful with any type of poison and avoid long term use of chemicals if you can.

Also note that Telfast and other similar drugs can be useful in controlling the reaction humans have to bird mite bites.. however it is not recommended. Use sparingly if at all. See a doctor.

There are various healing and soothing creams and ointments markets for psoriasis, baby rash and skin rash which can really help deal with the damage caused by bird mite bites.

45 000

Does the number 45 000 refer to the number of identified species, or the total number of species anticipated to exist (out of which we seems to have found 5 %)? \Mike(z) 10:59, 27 June 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Yes, please, this needs clarification! --345Kai 23:25, 20 September 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Done; 45,000 refers to the number of named species, there are many many more undescribed. IronChris | (talk) 00:40, 21 September 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Mite: Currency

Hi Everyone- I need to learn more about the Mite currency (an old form of currency from maybe 2000 years ago in the Middle East). I am not sure how to do it, but there needs to be some reference to this old currency here so that Mite (the insect) is not the only option for the users. Also, It doesn't appear that an article on Mites (currency) exists. Thanks.

Edit: I just found a reference to the mite currency in the Greek lepton article. Thanks.

More

Any experts out there? This article is close to a stub.

Why do there have to be pictures? Ugh, I have those things in me right now, thank you very much! —Preceding unsigned comment added by 24.36.89.42 (talk) 04:36, 3 March 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Haha, I know. It's very easy to get skeeved out by these things. KenFehling (talk) 07:47, 6 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]

birdmites

Anyone care to add information on birdmites? There is some scary information on birdmites.org and not sure how much of it is true, as it is commercially backed. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 76.201.77.54 (talk) 05:18, 18 August 2009 (UTC) agreed —Preceding unsigned comment added by 174.34.161.130 (talk) 02:44, 27 December 2010 (UTC)[reply]

Quite a bit of it is true, unfortunately. Bird mites are hard to kill, hard to control, resistant to most pesticides and can ruin your life. Another problem is lack of recognition. Very few experts care to study the problem, and most will adamantly state that bird mites (and other mites) can not infest humans - usually quoting nonsense about mites not being able to bite through human skin and not liking human blood. Both of these assumptions are wrong. Fortunately this attitude is changing, slowly.

Ivermectin may help. See birdmites.org for a start on combating this problem. Shanspirations for a second. A cure was found a long time ago - benzyl benzoate. Acts as both an insecticide and as a repellent. Combined with diatomaceous earth and sulphur along with the same precautions and solution for treating scabies bird mites can be controlled and eliminated.

1.41.43.196 (talk) 16:36, 1 March 2012 (UTC)[reply]

Borax, lye, sulphur, alcohol, ammonia and menthol have been used for centuries to deal with mite infestations. Lye and ammonia are used to clean the environment where mites live which walls, ceilings, floors; alcohol is used as a contact poison to kill mites; sulphur in powdered form is used as a repellent and contact killer, in the environment sulphur is dusted onto walls and into cracks, for humans sulphur is dusted onto the skin and covered with clothes to trap in the sulphur and force contacts with mites; borax is either spread around the environment as a powder or mixed with water sprayed onto the environment including walls, ceilings and floors to contact kill and build up layers of poison. Menthol crystals are evaporated to form a gas toxic to mites.

The main issues with these chemicals are:

  • Sulphur has a recognisable irritating odour, may stain clothes and is slow to act; on the positive side sulphur can last a long time
  • Lye is an irritant which must be used with great care and can damage skin; on the positive side lye is cheap and easy to use
  • Ammonia can irritate air passages and damage human skin
  • Alcohol evaporates too quickly to be anything more than a temporary measure against an infestation; on the plus side kill rate is very high and at rates which do not damage human skin
  • Menthol crystals are expensive; on the positive side menthol crystals can be placed into a container to kills mites where mites are infesting human clothes, books or other objects
  • Borax dissolved in water must be continually applied in layers to ensure contact with mites; on the positive side borax is cheap, and when mixed with water can be sprayed in all areas of a house including carpets to kill mites and form a protective barrier against an infestation with little side effects on humans — Preceding unsigned comment added by 58.108.147.30 (talk) 06:19, 26 August 2012 (UTC)[reply]

Had an infestation of bird mites in our house (originated from a bird dying in a dryer vent), and it lasted for months. Could feel them crawling on us immediately after a shower and had bites across my upper chest, shoulders, and back. Put diatomaceous earth on everything, wrapped upholstered furniture in plastic and washed all clothing and bedding daily. Used menthol, lavender,and more. What helped the most was using an enzyme cleaner (we used Kleen Green Naturally) to spray all walls, floors, furniture surfaces and our bodies after showers. Experts consulted at the time were of no help. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 76.115.221.79 (talk) 04:18, 24 July 2014 (UTC)[reply]

There is a listing a treatments at: http://www.AfterMite.com

The problem with focusing on just a few treatments is that bird mites adapt and can double their population within a week. If they have burrowed into your skin, you need to attack them Internally as well as Externally. There is a great deal of info at AfterMite.

mite cells

Some of these are so small they would only be a few cells wide; so does anyone have any idea how many cells they've got and how big they are. Some live in/on insects as parasites. From the data given if a bee was a long as a human, some mites would be as long as a bee (ie about 100x shorter in length).

So if typical animal cell is a about 0.01 mm across, how many cells can it fit in (or are they much tinier cells than average)?

I've just tried to add a link from this page to de:Milben. But I can't, because Milben is already linked from Acari. I don't have time to figure out the details of yet another wikisomething. Does somebody want to figure out how to make this work? GyroMagician (talk) 10:00, 16 December 2015 (UTC)[reply]

  • Before starting to expand this article, I put it through the Earwig copyvio detector and got worrying results, so I sought advice from the Copyright problems noticeboard. I asked "How can I tell whether the article is copying the websites concerned or vice-versa?" Cwmhiraeth (talk) 09:01, 27 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]

This is the response I received -

  • Re: the Flickr match, our article text appears to predate the Flickr upload, so we're good there. Re: the .gr match, the site looks dodgy which immediately set off alarm bells for a likely backwards copy. If you look in the history of the article, you can see that the en.wiki text evolved to the text of that website -- this diff and the subsequent diff (and possibly other diffs as well). So we're good there. The PRweb match is just a spam link at the bottom of the article (which I just removed) so we're good there too. In short, you can go ahead and expand the article without worrying about the potential copyright violations identified by the Earwig copyvio detector. Calliopejen1 (talk) 23:07, 3 October 2017 (UTC)[reply]