Summer may mean the emergence of some creepy, crawly (and slithery) critters, but that isn鈥檛 always a bad thing, 澳门六合彩资料库 Davis experts say. From many-legged creatures commonly found around your home during the summer to legless animals you might see out on a summer hike, here鈥檚 what our experts say about the critters of summer 鈥 and what our wet winter means for many of them.
Rattlesnakes: Exercise caution
Hot, dry weather suits California鈥檚 only venomous snake, the rattlesnake, just fine. And while a wet winter means lots of tall grass for snakes to hunt and hide in, , who studies the ecology and conservation of reptiles and amphibians, says there have been fewer reports of rattlesnakes this year.
鈥淢y best guess is that the snakes don鈥檛 have to move around much to find food, and so the snakes simply aren't being seen like they are in years where they must roam more widely to find food,鈥 Todd said, noting a booming population of rodents this year. 鈥淚t鈥檚 also possible that several years of drought took a toll on snakes and they will need a year or two to recover.鈥
But we are still in the height of rattlesnake bite season, which runs from April to October.
"It's best to be aware of one's surroundings and know how to respond when encountering a rattlesnake,鈥 said , an emergency medicine physician and toxicologist at 澳门六合彩资料库 Davis and the .
Sutter recommends hikers wear long pants and boots, stay on trails, be wary of picking up rocks and sticks, and do not touch or disturb a snake, even if it appears to be dead. If you are bitten, seek immediate medical attention, but avoid folk remedies such as tourniquets. .
More than 300 people are treated for rattlesnake bites in California each year, and dogs who nose around in tall grass or wood piles are also at risk.
Vaccines are available for dogs, but 澳门六合彩资料库 Davis veterinarian Karl Jandrey says that鈥檚 no substitute for emergency care.
鈥淎 rattlesnake vaccine doesn't necessarily prevent the need for medical attention or treatment,鈥 Jandrey said.
澳门六合彩资料库 Davis experts recommend keeping your dog on a leash, staying on trails and using a walking stick to rustle brush along trails to alert snakes of your presence. They don鈥檛 want to run into you, either. More tips to keep dogs safe from snakes and other summer dangers are available on the One Health blog.
Why you shouldn't fear spiders
The wet winter meant lots of insects, which now means lots of spiders to eat them. While not everyone enjoys having these arachnids around the house, remember that they鈥檙e the 鈥済ood guys鈥 that keep down other pests, said , director of the .
鈥淗umans love to fear what they don鈥檛 know anything about,鈥 she said, noting that Northern California doesn't have any dangerous spiders. Even the notorious black widow is extremely unlikely to 鈥渨aste鈥 any of its precious venom on a human because it doesn't see a human as a likely meal, she said.
鈥淵ou have as good a chance of being hit by an asteroid as being bitten by a black widow,鈥 Kimsey said. She said most black widow bites happen when a person unknowingly crushes one, leading the spider to bite reflexively 鈥 usually without venom.
She said the Bohart museum seeks to teach people to better understand spiders and other insects, so they won鈥檛 fear them. She鈥檚 always happy to see children visit the museum and handle furry, harmless tarantulas.
鈥淜ids should be playing with this stuff,鈥 she said.
Wasps and yellowjackets: Know the difference
It鈥檚 too late to do much to control populations of wasps and yellowjackets (traps need to be set out in early spring to keep populations from growing), but it鈥檚 still important to know which ones should cause concern.
Paper wasps have a more slender waist and form open nests in eaves and on walls. They usually ignore humans and aren't a cause for concern, Kimsey said.
On the other hand, yellowjacket wasps, which have brighter yellow stripes and aren't quite as thin as other wasps, commonly build nests in underground rodent holes. They鈥檙e sometimes called 鈥渕eat bees鈥 for their love of hamburgers and other meat. They鈥檝e been reported in greater numbers this year, .
If you spot a yellowjacket nest, stay away and call a professional exterminator. While most wasps live in small numbers and are mostly harmless, yellowjacket nests can be home to thousands of aggressive insects.
鈥淚f you get near a nest, they鈥檒l attack in numbers,鈥 Kimsey said. 鈥淕et a professional to deal with it.鈥
Mosquitos: Out of sight, out of mind
California鈥檚 central valley would be overrun with mosquitos if not for abatement districts, regional government agencies that work to control the bugs鈥 numbers, Kimsey said. Locally, the culls mosquito populations with insecticide that only affects mosquitos, and by distributing mosquito-eating fish. The agency also encourages preventative measures by the public.
Kimsey said the only downside of this arrangement is that when those abatement districts do their jobs well and there aren't many mosquitos around, people tend to forget someone is working hard to keep it that way.
鈥淟ife would be hell without them,鈥 she said.
She also said research institutions like 澳门六合彩资料库 Davis play a vital role in mosquito control by testing for new species that can stow away in materials and products being shipped to California. If officials only look for species they know are already here, they could miss a new species until it鈥檚 already established a large population, she said.
High temperatures keep down Sacramento stink bugs
Another benefit of a hot summer: . Brown marmorated stink bugs originate from Asia and were accidentally introduced to the US in the 1990s, becoming a serious agricultural and domestic pest in parts of the country. In Sacramento, they have attacked community gardens, sucking fruit and vegetable crops dry.
But it turns out that spells of triple-digit heat are bad news for the bugs: A few days over 100 degrees put a significant dent in the population. Entomologists from 澳门六合彩资料库 Extension and 澳门六合彩资料库 Davis are now running lab tests on how vulnerable the bugs are to hot weather.
Andy Fell contributed to this report.
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Andy Fell, News and Media Relations, 530-752-4533, ahfell@ucdavis.edu