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Cockroaches' Weird Grooming Behavior Explained

19 Mar 2013

Posted by Joseph Coupal

Perhaps Fluffy the cat let roaches and other insects in on a little secret about cleanliness: Turns out, the creepy crawlies incessantly groom themselves to keep their antennae free from environmental pollutants and chemicals the insects themselves produce, a new study shows.

The catlike bathing removes debris in order to keep insects' sense of smell sharp for finding food and mates and sensing danger, the researchers report today (Feb. 4) in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences..

"The evidence is strong: Grooming is necessary to keep these foreign and native substances at a particular level," said study co-author Coby Schal, an entomologist at North Carolina State University, in a statement. "Leaving antennae dirty essentially blinds insects to their environment.".

Though animals from mammals to insects are known to groom themselves, exactly why insects such as cockroaches do so remained a mystery..

To investigate the phenomenon, Schal and his colleagues compared the antennae of cleaned American cockroaches with those on cockroaches prevented from grooming. Normally, the bugs use their forelegs to shove their antennae into their mouths, and then systematically lick from top to bottom.

In the experiment, when antennae got dirty, they accumulated both environmental chemicals and a waxy substance that the giant insects secrete to stay hydrated.

By contrast, when insects were able to clean themselves, the action uncovered tiny pores on the antennae that allow sensory chemicals to travel to olfactory nerves, letting the cockroaches smell key chemical signals..

When the researchers exposed both groups of cockroaches to sex pheromones, or chemicals used by the insects to communicate about mating, scientists found the clean antennae could better detect the mating chemical than could dirty ones..

The team then subjected carpenter ants, German cockroaches and houseflies to similar experiments and found that all of the insects' antennae accumulated debris that could impair their senses of smell. (Carpenter ants rub their legs over their antennae to clean the organs.).

The findings could help in the design of better insecticides against the creepy crawlies. Many existing insecticides must slowly seep through insects' waxy outer cuticles. But because cockroaches constantly lick their antennae, a mist that settles onto these organs could cause the bugs to eat the poison very quickly, the researchers suggest..

American Cockroaches

07 Nov 2012

Posted by Joseph Coupal

Every visit = dozens upon dozens of American Cockroaches being caught on our insect monitors. Dozens more seen alive in the basement and boiler room. Tenants in the lower level floors were seeing them in their apartments. Treatment was suppression not elimination of the issue. It was like a band aid on a bullet wound! We told the property management firm that we must find the source! We said with absolute confidence that it was under the slab. Sure enough the slab was jack-hammered and PVC pipes were found broken and uncapped. In fact these pipes need to be lead not plastic! These were pipes leading to the water system of the city so roaches had a direct run from the city water system in the streets directly into the apartment building!

(click image to enlarge)

The pipes were fixed and the roach issue was solved! TRUST the expert advice that EHS offers and a solution will follow!

John D. Stellberger
President
Environmental Health Services, Inc.

Pest Control, RI, Pest Control, MA 


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