Saturday, September 28, 2013

How can you get rid of fleas on a Mongolian gerbil?

best watch for running and cycling on Flood, sweat and tears: The couple, their two children and two dogs ...
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giddy up y


I was watching my gerbil run around is cage. While I was watching him he started scratching his ears and head area. Then I saw him biting his side. I saw something black that looked like a flea on his head. He is totally black and has a white spot on his neck and that is where I saw it. So how am I supposed to get rid of them? Can they kill my gerbil or do they just make him itch like any other animal? I have never had this happen before.


Answer
Ivermectin from the exotic vet is what is typically prescribed for parasites. Most OTC products do not work, but you can get a couple of the ones for kittens. Revolution treats fleas, mites and lice. Advantage can be used for fleas and lice.

I will give you several links pertaining to parasites. The first 2 although for rats will also apply to any rodent. The third link although for mites discusses using an OTC made for kittens. The links are as follows:

http://gerbilforum.proboards.com/index.cgi?board=healthfaq&action=display&thread=11597&page=1

http://ratguide.com/meds/anti-infectives/advantage.php

http://ratguide.com/health/integumentary_skin/ectoparasites.php

You will need to thoroughly scrub the cage and all accessories after treatment. Toss all wood products as they can contain eggs. Ask an exotic vet for treatment times with the product you choose as you will need to repeat based on life cycle of the parasite. For instance, with mites, I was told to repeat the Revolution 2 weeks after and then again 1 month later. Repeat the cleaning process, too, of course. You will need to treat all animals in your home, though, for the fleas.

Fleas and any parasite can come from anywhere. It has nothing to do with how you clean a cage. Bedding often contains mites which is why it is recommended the bedding be baked or frozen prior to use. I am sorry your little one has fleas. It is a real pain for everyone.

Running and Cycling Intervals With Heart Rate?







I just got a heart rate monitor last week to help me out for my running and cycling training.

What do I do when I have to do intervals (eg. 3 mins at a faster pace then 3 mins at a slower pace).

Because the heart rate takes a while to get up to the higher bpm and then come back down, like a lag in time sort of thing.

Should I just do intervals based on percieved exertion of how hard I'm going?



Answer
That's because it takes a little while for your heart rate to rise and come back down before/after an interval, it always lags. Some watches you can set an HR zone(s). It will beep or it will calculate the time in the various "zone(s)". Just use the average HR over your 3-minutes at a certain pace. I never pay much attention to my HR monitor, you can pick up adjacent peoples signal, traffic lights interfere with it, you get weird blips. It's useful to see what your max is and how long it takes to recover, but over than that I never found much use for it.




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