Oil-Based Pesticides Most Effective At Killing This

In what might be a new breakthrough for the spider-control field, researchers have found that oil-based pesticides are more effective than water-based pesticides at killing the contents of brown widow spider egg sacs. This finding is important because trying to control adult spiders without controlling their eggs is like plucking dandelions without taking out their roots. This image shows a brown widow spider. Credit: Rick Vetter

In what might be a new breakthrough for the spider-control field, researchers have found that oil-based pesticides are more effective than water-based pesticides at killing the contents of brown widow spider egg sacs.

This finding is important because trying to control adult spiders without controlling their eggs is like plucking dandelions without taking out their roots.

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This image shows a brown widow spider. Credit: Rick Vetter

"The brown widow spider egg sac is constructed with highly hydrophobic silks, so the water-based pesticide sprays were not very effective in penetrating the egg sac and impacting the eggs inside," said Dr. Dong-Hwan Choe of University of California, Riverside, one of the co-authors. "In contrast, the oil-based aerosols were highly effective in penetrating the egg sac silk, providing the complete prevention of the spider emergence.

"Spider egg sacs are important because each female spider can produce many egg sacs, and each egg sac has many eggs in it. Field-collected brown widow egg sacs in southern California average around 135 eggs per sac with a range of 23 to 282 eggs."

Rick Vetter, a co-author of the paper, said most pesticides used around structures in the pest-control industry are water-based, and therefore might not be effective.

"The labels on pesticides may say that they kill spiders, but the fact that it may be ineffective against egg sac contents is a novel concept for control of spiders around homes," said Vetter. "The public should realize that the pesticides that they purchase from the home improvement centers may not be doing the job that they want them to do. This is not because the pesticides are ineffective. They do kill the contents if the pesticide can contact the eggs or spiderlings. The trick is to get it past the silk layer of the egg sac, which some of the oil-based pesticides do."

"If you want to control spiders," Vetter continued, "you have to control egg sacs too, and if you want to kill spider egg sac contents, you need to use an oil-based pesticide."

Published in the Journal of Economic Entomology  
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