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It could be poison ivy or related dermatitis, insect bites, shingles, or a host of other possibilities.
Insects and other arthropods whose bites or stings typically cause allergy include the following: bees, wasps, and hornets.mosquitoes.fleas.scabies
mosquito and termights are sometimes mistaken for each other, however they are very different insect groups.
Praying mantids are masters of camouflage like stick insects, so you may have mistaken it for a stick insect. Mantids are carnivorous and will eat other insects.
It is possible that an insect bit you several times; sometimes one mosquito bite shows up as several bumps. It could be caused by an ant, mosquito, or other insect.
It is possible that an insect bit you several times; sometimes one mosquito bite shows up as several bumps. It could be caused by an ant, mosquito, or other insect.
Native Americans used alder bark to treat insect bites, poison oak, and other skin irritations.
Sand is used on roofing shingles to keep the individual shingles from sticking to each other during storage.
Pesticides remove pests which are detrimental to other human processes such as growing crops, or being able to go outside without the risk of insect bites and/or contracting disease carried by pests.
Raccoons help control insect and rodent populations.
There is no actual "opposite" of an insect. However, the other insect-sized arthropods are the arachnids (Spiders and scorpions).
No. While you can catch chickenpox, shingles comes from a virus already within you (chickenpox virus) so you can only have shingles if you have previously had chickenpox. I myself had shingles back when I was in the fourth grade but neither my brother nor my sister ever had it.