Some cockroaches have developed an aversion to glucose, which may save them deadly traps but has also put a damper on their sex life AFP Humans using sugar in cockroach traps has inadvertently led to ...
Scientists may have discovered why cockroaches are so hard to stamp out. Some species have lost their sweet tooth, making the sugared poisons laid to attract and kill them useless. US scientists ...
Suburbanites may be blissfully unaware, but for city dwellers it’s one of nature’s ultimate truths: cockroaches love sweets. Sure, the repulsive, disease-carrying insects eat anything at all, from ...
A mum has told of her family's harrowing plight as her house is blighted by the 'worst' cockroach infestation which sees her trap a thousand of the insects every week. Danielle (not her real name) has ...
If you've spotted a live or dead cockroach inside your home, it's time to take immediate action. While it doesn't necessarily mean there is an infestation, preventing one is essential. Today, pest ...
Men’s Journal aims to feature only the best products and services. If you buy something via one of our links, we may earn a commission. A cockroach infestation is enough to make even the toughest of ...
A strain of cockroaches in Europe has evolved to outsmart the sugar traps used to eradicate them. American scientists found that the mutant cockroaches had a "reorganised" sense of taste, making them ...
Paris – Humans using sugar in cockroach traps has inadvertently led to female roaches being turned off by the sugary “gifts” males use to entice them into mating. But do not celebrate the demise of ...
But don't celebrate the demise of cockroaches just yet -- some males have adapted new ways to continue wooing females, including by shortening the length of foreplay, a study said on Wednesday. The ...