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Musophobia or Muriphobia- Fear of mice. It's generally applied to all rodents.
Example sentence - The odor from the rodents would permeate into the wood and cannot be removed.
Badgers are omnivores with a diet of rodents, earthworms, grubs, fruit and roots.
Some common examples of pests are rodents, snails, slugs, locusts, cabbage butterfly and many more.
I assume you mean the mountains in Oregon, Three Sisters.There is a variety of animals and wildlife that live there. Deer, Elk, Black Bears, Trout, Coyotes, Foxes, Various birds including Eagles. There's more than one variety of eagle including bald eagles and golden eagles. Various insects and rodents, Squirrels. Snakes including garter snakes, gopher snakes, and the poisonous rattle snake.
Diseases and aggressiveness usually
Many snakes can be harmful, but they benefit us by eating rodents such as: mice, rats, and etc. that might carry diseases. Spiders can be harmful as well, they benefit us by eating insects like: house flys, mosquitos, and other insects. They keep the bug population at a normal level.
yes some types of rodents can eat insects
Rodents carry many diseases and can transmit these diseases to people.
No--bugs are insects and rodents are mammals. Some rodents are: Rats, mice, etc.
they eat rodents rodents, insects, birds, lemings
Rodents=rats, mice, similar/roaches are insects. (cockroaches)
Many animals can carry diseases, however rodents are rarely the real culprit when it comes to diseases that affect humans. More often it is insects, typically the ones that feed off of blood such as fleas, ticks, mosquitos and bedbugs, who by feeding off of blood can tranfer diseases present in the blood of previous hosts into the blood of their current food source. As well, certain flies can carry large amounts of dangerous bacteria on their bodies.
V. C. G. Richardson has written: 'Diseases of small domestic rodents' -- subject(s): Rodents as pets, Diseases, Rodents 'Diseases of domestic guinea pigs' -- subject(s): Guinea pigs, Diseases
This is an extremely broad question - the term "insects" covers a wide range of species, and the term "harm" is very vague. In general, insects that are living in their native habitat don't harm the environment - they are part of the ecologic system and are both controlled by predators and control their food sources (plant pollen, other insects, etc). Native insects sometimes harm humans, such as mosquitoes biting humans and infecting them with malaria or dengue fever. However, this is normal for that environment. Insects that are invasive into other environments tend to cause a lot of harm - there are no predators that can control them, and once established these populations tend to outcompete the native insect populations. Invasive insects can also harm humans, although the primary issue tends to be environmental.
In US agriculture, weeds are the number one targeted pest, followed by insects. Arthropods (such as mites), diseases, and rodents are also important targets.
Insects