Figure 1. Adult
female German cockroach, Blattella germanica (Linnaeus), with ootheca. Photograph by James Castner, University
of Florida.
Figure 2. German Roach Stages
Life Cycle
The German cockroach has
three life stages typical of insects with incomplete metamorphosis: the egg,
nymph, and adult. The entire life cycle is completed in about 100 days.
However, factors such as temperature, nutritional status, and strain
differences may influence the time required to complete a life cycle. German
cockroaches breed continuously with many overlapping generations present at any
one time. Under ideal conditions, population growth has been shown to be
exponential. Actively growing field populations are comprised of 80 percent
nymphs and 20 percent adults. The German cockroach is omnivorous, eating table
scraps, pet food, and even book bindings.
Medical and Economic Significance
German cockroach’s
adulterate food or food products with their feces and defensive secretions,
physically transport and often harbor pathogenic organisms, may cause severe
allergic responses, and in extremely heavy infestations have been reported to
bite humans and feed on food residues on the faces of sleeping humans. In
addition, some scientists suggest that German cockroach infestations may cause
human psychological stress and that the stigma associated with infestations
alters human behavior. For example, people with infested houses do less
entertaining, and avoid the kitchen at night for fear of encountering a
cockroach.
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