From ae5430d17fbf6f7bb334312ef6f572f929fab0dc Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Eli Boshears Date: Mon, 17 Nov 2025 03:35:30 +0800 Subject: [PATCH] Add 'Do Bug Zappers Work?' --- Do-Bug-Zappers-Work%3F.md | 1 + 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+) create mode 100644 Do-Bug-Zappers-Work%3F.md diff --git a/Do-Bug-Zappers-Work%3F.md b/Do-Bug-Zappers-Work%3F.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..5deff89 --- /dev/null +++ b/Do-Bug-Zappers-Work%3F.md @@ -0,0 +1 @@ +
Do [rechargeable bug zapper](https://www.git.omezaldama.xyz/irismerion779) Zappers Work? Q. I thought I learn someplace that [bug zapper for camping](https://url.zeus27.com/qtrleandro183) zappers don’t actually work. My neighbor’s zapper is driving me loopy with that ZZZZT noise all evening. I’d like to indicate him proof that every one he’s doing is annoying his neighbor. A. Yes, there is a few scientific data on the usefulness of bug zappers, but first we want to distinguish between the [Zappify Bug Zapper site](http://git.junfenghe.com/winonaneilsen0) zappers that homeowners use of their yards to (hopefully) kill mosquitoes, and the industrial insect gentle traps that pest control professionals use largely in eating places, food plants, and warehouses. These costly industrial traps are used mainly to kill house flies and so they do work. The comparatively cheap backyard bug zappers kill plenty of flying insects, simply not mosquitoes. [Zappify Bug Zapper](https://git.barsisr.fr/dorrislecouteu) zappers use ultraviolet gentle to attract mosquitoes to a metal grid where they are electrocuted or "zapped." Folks that own these traps swear by them. They point to the piles of useless insects that they empty out of the trap each morning. And those insects do seem like mosquitoes. But largely they're midges, harmless fliers that do not chunk and are thought-about helpful. Bug zappers really attract and kill very few mosquitoes. Instead, the ultraviolet gentle attracts hordes of insects into the yard that wouldn’t have been there otherwise. Yard zappers have by no means fared very effectively in analysis assessments. One study found that 89% of the zapped insects were midges \ No newline at end of file