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Post by southcity on Jul 29, 2005 0:51:29 GMT -5
This may seem like already visited and negated info to some of you who have had this for a while, Myself included. BUT if you check out this link www.nondelusional.com/viewersubmissions.htm and scroll down the page to the last submissions pictures you will see a couple of picts of our tell tale lesions and then you will see some pictures of thrips which the same person had exiting their body. OK but it still doent seem to fit you say. Go to this link www.ento.csiro.au/thysanoptera/Symposium/Section8/41-Pinent-et-al.pdf and read the whole article. Theres a lot of good info here and I will post more picts from the same person shortly. \ As you can the pictures and info submitted by those with this illness is rapidly making some strong points that are hard to dismiss. Its also going to make putting a map together of all areas people are affected by this which has the potential to answer questions not even asked yet. If you have or do not have a photos to submit to www.nondelusional.com please at least submit a story and your general location. All the people out there that are not being believed concerning this soon will have some impacting, centralized data to support their words and as all of us long timers know this part of this messed up disorder is as frustrating if not more so than the actual physical symptoms.
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Post by ANTHILL on Jul 29, 2005 0:59:26 GMT -5
hi south city can we post links to our pic's?
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Post by southcity on Jul 29, 2005 2:04:33 GMT -5
Anthill
Absolutly please do Send me anything you feel relevant and Ill try to organize it all in a constructive manor. Ive seen your picts i believe of the same little creature. did you happen to read in that paper from the link above how certain thrips construct cocoons as part of their metamorphosis?
Interesting paper. I have emailed the author with links and short explaination but still have not heard back from him/her.
Thanks Southcity
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Post by SpecueLatin on Jul 29, 2005 11:30:46 GMT -5
Hello Southcity, Thank you so much for your willingness to put forth this kind of effort. You have a great marketing mind to have thought of this method to package a bunch of our stories and pictures for presentation. Everybody else, Be sure to check out the site Southcity posted that shows great pictures of, I guess it is of a larval stage, of these mightily or is it MITEily adaptable THRIPS that can switch victims and nutritional feeding programs in no time flat. They do look a lot like some of these varmints we see and have caused lesions in humans. spec
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Post by itchingntexas on Jul 30, 2005 0:00:46 GMT -5
Neat info. We have found both thrips and Collembola. The thrips grow quite large (some the size of a fruit fly or so). I am the one who found one and stuck it on tape, only to find it in the morning with--what else--a long, white stringy thing coming out of it! I truly believe this is significant. Thanks for posting.
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Post by SpecueLatin on Jul 30, 2005 13:35:11 GMT -5
Hey ho! We need a thread titled Fly catchers/ stringers, made by the original fly paper company...AEROXON since 1908 I found the window ones at Walmart and the stringers. The imitations are more expensive! AEROZON website: www.roxide.com1-914-235-5300 spec
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Post by Tara on Aug 16, 2005 0:11:03 GMT -5
Ok I don't know if this means anything but I know that it sure starttled me. Then again most anything does these days even my own shadow. I was curious as to what the heck thrips were so I googled it and found this site. The first link is what seemed to bother me on thrips the second one just as pics of different looking ones and info on the things. Please let me know if I have lost it or what after you look at this. Also I forgot to tell you that some months back I and my husband had found what looked to be flying black ants or termites. we had the bug guy came out and take the bag that we had put one of these bugs in that lived there for days and even seemed to leave larva behind in the bag in different spots. I never heard back from them and the apt people never call them for me. ipmofalaska.homestead.com/files/beauveria.htmlipmofalaska.homestead.com/files/thrips.html
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Post by Spec on Aug 16, 2005 0:25:44 GMT -5
When the opportunity presents itself, please take specimens to the County Extension Service. I think all locales have one, but I have always lived in agricultural locales, so I am not sure they are always available. Use these words, and your counties name to see if there is a place for you to get bugs identified.
Ours near Phoenix, is actually shipped to and performed at the U of A, in Tucson.
spec
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Post by Lisa on Aug 16, 2005 16:32:56 GMT -5
Tara, this is way too weird! I just now got through looking, (for more than an hour), at info on Beauveria bassiana. In the end, I decided not to post anything on it and then I start reading the board and found you did. So in light of that, I thought I would share what I thought was interesting. What are the odds that I would be looking at this very topic? Anway, most of the technical stuff is already in what you posted, but I thought this was important: Human deep tissue infection with an entomopathogenic Beauveria species. www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&list_uids=12089314&dopt=Abstractbmc.ub.uni-potsdam.de/1476-7961-3-1/- the use of fungi in agricultural pest management practices can greatly increase the potential for human exposure to these agents - highlight the importance of considering the possibility that multiple fungal sensitivity can occur due to exposure to a single fungus - In the present study, we demonstrate Beauveria bassiana crude extracts contain numerous allergens capable of being recognized by human serum IgEs www.ars.usda.gov/research/publications/Publications.htm?seq_no_115=114753Use of the Entomopathogeenic Fungi, Beauveria Bassiana and Paecilomyces Fumosoroseus As Biorational Agents-Field Trials in Upland Cotton www.epa.gov/fedrgstr/EPA-PEST/ 1999/April/Day-28/p10093.htm - A comment was received in response to the notice of filing regarding the potential for Beauveria bassiana (B. bassiana) to colonize corn and infect lungs of wild rodents and nasal passages of humans. - The data submitted for product identity of the active ingredient, Beauveria bassiana (ATCC #74040), and end use product, are sufficient to support the request for the proposed exemption from the requirement of a tolerance. - Data provided to the Agency show that Naturalis-L is a dermal sensitizer. In several animals, the severity of irritation required relocation of test site for inductions 8 and 9. In addition, two animals died during the study Dermal and inhalation exposure and risk to adults, infants and children via treated lawns or recreational areas are likely if the pesticide is used as labeled.
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