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What Causes Bugs to Die In-Home?

Emily Jarvis

Pests are a familiar nuisance in many homes. Warm months and dry spells bring bugs indoors; other attractions include light sources and exposed food. Some bugs cannot live long indoors, and bugs can die in the home for a variety of reasons.

Bugs enter the home for a variety of reasons. When they don't find what they're looking for, they die.

Although most people prefer the pests dead, living among dead bugs is no way to live.

Lack of Water

Bugs often wander indoors during the hot, dry summer in search of water. This is why bugs are commonly found near kitchens and bathrooms. If the bugs cannot find a source of water, they eventually die. Sealing doors, windows, pipes, vents and exterior cracks are the only ways to keep bugs out, but you can ensure they die rather than thrive in your home by draining water sources like sinks and tubs and repairing leaks.

Lack of Food

Bugs also come indoors in search of food. Like ants to a picnic, other pests make a beeline for garbage and food left out. Much like their need for water, bugs who cannot feed in the home eventually die. Removing the garbage daily or fastening a lid to the garbage can staves off the pests, as does storing food in airtight containers or the refrigerator.

Light Sources

Flying insects are attracted to light sources like lamps for several reasons. Some, like bees, use the sun and moon to navigate, and cannot differentiate light sources. Others, like moths and flies, are attracted to the heat a lamp emits. Dead insects are sometimes found near lamps and porch lights because they either fly into the lamp and experience trauma, or they burn themselves on the hot bulb.

Poisoning

Having your home inspected and sprayed regularly by a licensed exterminator is key to preventing bugs in the home and killing those that manage to invade. Many dead bugs have been killed by pesticides in the home. Spotting dead bugs does not necessarily mean that the exterminator is ineffective. The fact that the bugs have died is a sign the pesticides are doing their job.

The Drip Cap

  • Pests are a familiar nuisance in many homes.
  • Bugs often wander indoors during the hot, dry summer in search of water.
  • This is why bugs are commonly found near kitchens and bathrooms.
  • Sealing doors, windows, pipes, vents and exterior cracks are the only ways to keep bugs out, but you can ensure they die rather than thrive in your home by draining water sources like sinks and tubs and repairing leaks.
  • Some, like bees, use the sun and moon to navigate, and cannot differentiate light sources.