Clarification needed: do you mean how to get rid of an earwig or how to give an earwig a home, food, and care? If the first, use earwig bait. If the second, an earwig can do that best for itself.
squish em'! Kill 'um instead with a sudsy mix of liquid detergent, water and alcohol...keep it fairly thick -- think cooking oil, not dishwater. Soak the ground where there are suspected nests; go around your foundation and sidewalk cracks, anyplace those little suckers hide (under rocks, near trees and shrubs, etc.). When this sudsy water hits them it will kill them in less than ten seconds.
The most basic technique for controlling earwigs or other scavenging vermin is just to be very neat with your food and never leave anything edible lying around, unless it is in a tight and sturdy container that earwigs can't get into. If they have nothing to eat, they either starve, or go elsewhere in search of food. In addition, you can help this process along with insecticide. But only neatness gives any long-term protection. If you kill insects with insecticide, sooner or later the insects will be back, if there is food for them to eat.
How do you kill an earwig?
Raid
Water
Spiders and Frogs eat Earwigs.
Yes earwigs can climb
Earwigs do not pich , but may use their "pinchers" as a defense
There still called Earwigs But those earwigs dont go in your ears like most of them do they come out of the sewer more often then they do outside
They are earwigs.
Earwigs communicate with other earwigs from pheromones that they excrete to attract other earwigs. They pick up the pheromones with their antennae.
Spiders and Frogs eat Earwigs.
Yes earwigs can climb
Earwigs are herbivores. See the Related Link below.
No.
do not no
Earwigs are vegetarians. They love fresh gardens and green leafy plants. You can safely use diatomaceous earth around your garden to help control them.
Earwigs do not pich , but may use their "pinchers" as a defense
There still called Earwigs But those earwigs dont go in your ears like most of them do they come out of the sewer more often then they do outside
they slither
They are earwigs.
No.