Strong DIY Pest Controls at Capy.co.uk

Welcome to Capybara Pest Control Supplies and Services. Any problem please contact us on 01905 35 45 49 or help@capy.co.uk

Ant killer solutions! NB: We do not supply ant eaters!

Visit www.capy.co.uk for ant pest control solutions! Or call 01905 354549 or email help@capy.co.uk

Professional bed bug solutions!

Bud bug pest solutions with Capybara! For help visit www.capy.co.uk or contact us via email help@capy.co.uk or 01905 354549

Cat Fleas, Dog Fleas, Capybara has the solution!

Get rid of these nasty biting insects quickly and cost effectively with Capybara!

Monday, December 12, 2011

Oldest #Viruses #Infected #Insects 300 Million Years Ago

Viruses are packets of DNA in a protein shell. They can't reproduce on their own so take over DNA and protein making machinery of a host to survive. By comparing the genes of bracoviruses that live in parasitic wasps with those of free living insect viruses that haven't inserted their genes into a host genome called nudiviruses, and to their cousins the baculoviruses researchers determined that the two groups split about 310 million years ago. This is as old as insects themselves so insect viruses were already present from the beginning from the evolution of insects. Viruses have been found to infect every type of life; there are even viruses that infect viruses. 

#Bees Head For The Hills To #Mate


We know little about bee's mating behaviour but 'hilltopping', when males and females seek mates  on the tops of hills,  has been observed before in butterflies, flies, and wasps. Professor Dave Goulson from the University of Stirling noticed large numbers of bees  in the hills near the university.  He presumed they weren't foraging but looking for mates as the hills are windswept and flowerless. However nobody seems to have told the females. Though male bumblebees from four species were found females didn't seem to be taking advantage of the gathering. 

Man-Eating #Mushrooms #death


Artist Jae Rhim Lee believes we should think about the way we deal with death in a new way. Instead of embalming our deceased loved ones and doing everything possible “to preserve the body and protect it from the environment, with the idea that decomposition is something to be avoided,” Lee says the Western burial ritual distances us from death and our own mortality. Her suggestion is that we embrace decomposition and so has designed a prototype of a burial suit that can be seeded with mushroom’s spores that have been specifically trained to digest the tissues of the human body.

School #Bugs

School Bugs
As children across the country settle into the new school year,  hundreds of children in a school, and up to 30 in each class, the risk of disease increases. Most parents will be aware of the more mundane colds,  headlice, chickenpox and conjunctivitis, but there are more frightening sounding diseases that are doing the rounds too. The Guardian has put together a timely guide to help worried parents giving all the facts about scarlet fever, threadworms, slapped cheek syndrome and hand, foot and mouth.

#Bats Keep Their Friends Close


It has been discovered that although bats change where they sleep within the colony every few days, they keep the same bats around them, forming tight social groups. These long term relationships can last for years. Studying the bats behaviour, researchers are hoping to predict how diseases might spread within the roost as a small proportion of bats carry rabies like viruses, and can also be the source of emerging diseases. Chinese bats are thought to have been responsible for the SARS virus outbreak.

Friday, December 9, 2011

What The Well Dressed #Mouse Is Wearing This Season #wildlife


Scientists at Stanford University have developed a tiny but powerful microscope that can fit on a mouses head and peer inside their brains without interfering with their actions. Previously studying mouse brains involved the mouse being held down or at least having their head restrained. With this new system the mice are free to behave naturally and freely. The microscope that looks a like a hi tech top hat could also be mass produced cheaply.

Exploding #Ants! #amazing #wildlife


In order to protect their colony from attack the ants of Borneo are willing to make the supreme sacrifice. They will grab an enemy ant and expel a lethal sticky substance that kills both attacker & defender. While all ants have glands in their jaws to release chemicals in alarm or defence, but these ants have filled most of their bodies with these secretions.  The insects operate on a hair-trigger; their bodies  are so swollen with the liquid that the merest touch will rupture the abdomen walls. 

There's A #Spider On Your Shoulder! #fashion


Couldn't resist linking to this new T shirt design. Not for the arachnophobe in your family but I love it. How about one covered in killer bees or beetles? Oh the endless possibilities!

Plankton Under The #Microscope #interesting #wildlife #photos


In his new book Ocean Drifters: A Secret World Beneath out this month, molecular geneticist Richard R. Kirby takes a close look at plankton. Plankton form the foundation of the marine food chain. They also remove carbon dioxide from the sea and provide Earth's atmosphere with oxygen. Rising sea surface temperatures due to anthropogenic climate change could  alter the sea's food web and the ecology of Earth. The book also boasts 150 high-magnification photographs, some of which are diplayed in this stunning slide show.

How To Avoid The Sting! #wasps


Many may be hoping for an Indian summer this month, many except those who are hypersensitive to wasp and hornet stings that is.  For an estimated 150,000 people in the UK one sting could be fatal.  If September proves to be calm and sunny wasp colonies will reach their peak size and release thousands of queens and males.  So how to avoid being stung? Wear white clothing as wasps seem least attracted to the colour and don't make rapid, sudden movements. If a wasp lands on you or gets into your clothing don't move, but let it leave in it's own time.  Don't prune back hedges till November when the wasps have died as some species nest in hedges. 

Wednesday, December 7, 2011

I Spy with my #insect eye...


I beleaf in miracles...

Images show animals' wonderful disguises

Fool-iage ... gecko could trick anyone into thinking it is not there
Fool-iage ... gecko could trick anyone into thinking it is not there
Ardea / Caters News Agency

THIS gecko knows how to plant itself in the perfect hiding spot — by making itself look like a leaf.

The creature — a Leaf-tailed Gecko — is barely visible against the foliage.
It is one of a number of animals that are true masters of disguise, blending into their environment to fool predators or prey.
Some animals use a mixture of shape, colour, texture and behaviour to make them appear like their surroundings.
A Speckled Sanddab blends in with the pebbled ocean floor). Stare at these pictures for long enough and you might just spot some clever creatures playing an impressive game of hide and seek
Ardea / Caters News Agency
The gecko in Andasibe-Mantadia National Park in Madagascar features in a collection of pictures that also include a Speckled Sanddab fish that makes itself look like pebbled ocean floor.
Other images show a Katydid that camouflages itself on moss in Costa Rica, a Bat-faced Toad among dead leaves in a park in Colombia, a Mossy Leaf-tailed Gecko on a tree, as well as a Lichen Spider that hides on bark in Thailand.
Green and unseen ... Katydid hides on moss
Green and unseen ... Katydid hides on moss
Caters News Agency
Hidden ... Bat-faced Toad is camouflaged on leaves
Hidden ... Bat-faced Toad is camouflaged on leaves
Ardea / Caters News Agency
Hard find ... gecko is nearly impossible to spot on tree
Hard find ... gecko is nearly impossible to spot on tree
Ardea / Caters News Agency
Crawl over ... but spider is difficult to notice on bark
Crawl over ... but spider is difficult to notice on bark
Ardea / Caters News Agency

Friday, December 2, 2011

Government Declares war On Urban #Seagulls


Ministers plan to launch a research project to find a solution to the growing problems of noise, mess, disease and aggression caused by urban seagulls. The population of herring gulls has fallen  60% in the last 30 years and lesser black-backed gulls have declined 30% in 25 years, but in towns and cities their numbers have increased dramatically as they are drawn to our ever growing landfill sites.  The environment minister, Richard Benyon, has asked  Bristol University  to begin a 3 year research project to find solutions to the problem.

6 Of Nature's Most Diabolical #Predators


Fungus gnat maggots produce dangling strands of mucus that are illuminated by  glowing bacteria to lure moths to a sticky end in the Glow Worm Cave of New Zealand.  Broods of the parasitic blister beetle clump together and release pheromones to imitate a female bee, luring down a male so they can hitch a ride. When the hapless male eventually finds  a real female bee to mate with the grubs transfer to her and she witlessly carries them back to her nursery where they feast on her young. The Portia spider designs a new tactic for every individual spider they hunt, playing on the prey's species, behaviours and circumstances. Some female fireflies imitate the mating flashes of competing species to lure the males  in, kill and eat them. The cobra lily lures insects in, traps them, and devours them when they fall exhausted into a drowning pool of corpse filled fluid. The assassin bug impale prey on straw-like mouthparts, pump them full of digestive enzymes and suckout their innards. Ain't nature grand!

The Komodo Dragon – The World's Largest #Venomous #Animal


Fascinating slide show of this fearsome predator. It can kill prey as large as a buffalo and is able to eat 80% of its body weight in one sitting. 90% of the dragon's attacks on prey result in a kill. Their venomous saliva stops blood from clotting so victims bleed to death. Yet even with all this going for it there are only about 4,000 of them left and are therefore deemed 'vulnerable'
We can't deal with animals such as these... but for the usual pest control problems such as rodents and UK household insects like fleas and bed bugs, London Pest Services and Capybara Pest Control is your number 1 place. 

Thursday, December 1, 2011

Biggest #Insect... #Scary!


Into the record bugs

Biggest ever ... Weta bug found in NZ
Biggest ever ... Weta bug found in NZ
Mark Moffett / Minden / Solent

AN EXPLORER has found the biggest insect ever on record - so large it can scoff a carrot.

She's called a Weta Bug and has a huge wing span ofSEVEN inches and weighs as much as three mice.
Former park ranger Mark Moffett, 55, discovered the cricket-like creature up a tree on New Zealand's Little Barrier Island.
He spent two days searching for the creepy crawly which were thought to be extinct after Europeans brought rats to the island many years ago.
American Mark, 53, said: "Three of us walked the trails of this small island for two nights scanning the vegetation for a giant weta.
Huge ... insect weighs as much as three mice
Huge ... insect weighs as much as three mice
Mark Moffett / Minden / Solent.
"We spent many hours with no luck finding any at all, before we saw her up in a tree.
"The giant weta is the largest insect in the world, and this is the biggest one ever found.
"She enjoyed the carrot so much she seemed to ignore the fact she was resting on our hands and carried on munching away.
"She would have finished the carrot very quickly, but this is an extremely endangered species and we didn't want to risk indigestion.
"After she had chewed a little I took this picture and we put her right back where we found her."
Mark, from Colorado, added: "We bug lovers hear a lot of people who think insects are inferior in some way because of their size, so it was great to see such a big insect.
"This became all the more amazing when we realised that this was the largest insect recorded."
http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/news/3972007/Worlds-biggest-ever-insect-found-called-the-Weta-Bug.html

Unwanted #Cat Takes Up #Pest #Control Duties At Drum Castle


Candy the cat had spent 10 months in SSPCA’s Aberdeenshire Rescue and Rehoming Centre in Drumoak before Dr Alison Burke, property manager at Drum Castle in Aberdeenshire heard of Candy's plight and offered her a home. Not just any home though. Candy now resides in the grand and historic surroundings of the National Trust of Scotland's Drum Castle, near Aberdeen where she has taken up pest control duties protecting the castle from rats and mice.

#Hospital Uniforms Carry Dangerous #Bacteria


Over 60% of nurses' and doctors' uniforms tested positive for potentially dangerous bacteria including MRSA in a recent study published in the American Journal of Infection Control.  Samples were taken from the abdominal zone, sleeves' ends and pockets  of the  uniforms of 75 registered nurses and 60 medical doctors at the Shaare Zedek Medical Centre in Jerusalem. Half of the cultures obtained contained pathogens. 27 containes multi-drug resistant pathogens including 8 cultures of MRSA.

Typical 'The Sun' News Article!! #Rats


Rodent to ruin

Pair wreck house looking
for a rat...but never find it

Flaw plan ... boards are up in the lounge but no sign of the rat
Flaw plan ... boards are up in the lounge but no sign of the rat

A BARMY couple wrecked their house looking for a rat — and never found it.

They caused £5,500 worth of damage to the rented home.
Terror ... Fay
Terror ... Fay
MEN Syndication
Defiance ... rat remained at large
Defiance ... rat remained at large
Drunk ex-soldier Gary Taylor tore out a fireplace, ripped up lino and pulled up floorboards — but could not find the rodent.
Taylor, 42, even smashed up concrete foundations in the cellar in Rochdale, Gtr Manchester, after terrified Leanne Fay, 38, claimed she spotted a rat last April.
Taylor was jailed for three months after admitting criminal damage.
Fay was given a suspended three-month sentence at Bolton Crown Court after admitting the same charge.
Judge William Morris said: "This is the most extraordinary case."
Debasement ... search for the rat leaves the cellar in a terrible state
Debasement ... search for the rat leaves the cellar in a terrible state
Gone suite ... there's no trace of rodent in trashed bathroom either
Gone suite ... there's no trace of rodent in trashed bathroom either

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