The difference between mites and insects is, taxonomically speaking, much greater than most people realize â mites are not even insects.
Insects belong to the class Insecta â six legs, body divided into three tagmata (head, thorax, abdomen), one pair of antennae, and usually have wings (not all insects have wings, but this is a primitive characteristic of the class).
Mites belong to the subclass Acari within the class Arachnida â the same major group as spiders and ticks.
Adult mites have eight legs (six in the larval stage), a body with only two tagmata (cephalothorax and abdomen, no separate head), no antennae, and no wings.
Evolutionarily speaking â mites are more closely related to spiders than to any insect.
This explains why common insecticides may be ineffective against mites â there are significant physiological and neurological target-site differences between mites and insects.
Specific acaricides (such as fluazuron, abamectin) act on targets unique to mites â whereas general insecticides may exert insufficient selection pressure on mites.
Another practical implication â most "whole-house aerosol insecticides" will not significantly reduce indoor dust mite populations â because the physiology of dust mites and their sensitivity to chemicals differ from that of cockroaches and fleas.
Controlling dust mites requires specialized environmental management strategies â allergen-proof mattress and pillow encasements, high-temperature washing, and indoor humidity control.