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Homeowners Guide to Pest Management: Cockroaches

German Cockroach German cockroach: Adults 9/16 inch long, with well-developed wings (but they seldom fly). Prefers hot (85-950F), humid places, e.g. in kitchens, near stoves, dishwashers and sinks.

Brown Banded Cockroach Brown-banded cockroach: Adults about 1/2 inch long; will fly when disturbed. Prefers warm (over 800F), dry, high-level places, e.g. wall cabinets, behind pictures and inside television sets and wall clocks.

American Cockroach American cockroach: Adults 1½ inches long, with large wings which they use for flying or gliding in warm locations. Prefers hot (85-950F), humid places, living outdoors in decaying vegetation in the South and Southeast, but also occupying sewers and invading homes, especially basements and garbage areas.

Smoky Brown Cockroach Smokybrown cockroach: Adults 1¼ inches long, with large wings-an excellent flyer. Prefers hot (85~9so F), sheltered humid places, living outdoors (especially in treeholes) in the South and Southeast but commonly invading homes, often via the eaves.

Oriental Cockroach Oriental cockroach: Adults about 1 inch long, wings present but small and functionless in males and absent in females. Prefers temperate (70-800F), low-level, damp places, especially sewers, drains, basements and mulched flowerbeds. Several other species of cockroaches are regionally important and will be known to professional pest control operators.


What Can You Do Against Cockroaches?
Cockroaches need food, water and hiding places in order to survive, and if you can reduce the availability of these factors you will discourage them and make them more vulnerable to other measures aimed at killing them. However, it is important to recognize that while good sanitation can make it harder for cockroaches to thrive, sanitation measures alone will not eliminate a well-established cockroach infestation-only pesticides can do that. But remember that cockroaches have developed resistance to many over-the-counter pesticides. Even worse, some over-the-counter pesticides are highly repellent and can actually make an infestation worse by scattering cockroaches to new areas. Proper selection and use of pesticides is best left to professionals. But here are 10 specific nonchemical measures you can carry out that will complement pesticide applications, perhaps improving the results from pesticides and reducing the amount of pesticide needed.


10 Things You Can Do

  1. Where cockroaches are common outdoors, trim overhanging trees and remove foundation plantings or wall climbing vegetation to discourage invasion (this is especially useful in the South and Southeast).
  2. Screen doors, windows and attic vents, and seal foundation cracks and around utilities, to discourage entry of outdoor-living cockroaches. Also, windows and doors, especially garage doors, should be closed when not in use.
  3. Check incoming provisions, especially groceries, drink cartons and firewood, for "hitchhiking" cockroaches.
  4. Inspect your luggage and handbags when returning from buildings likely to be infested, such as some hotels or hospitals.
  5. Don't leave food and drink, for people or pets, exposed overnight. Put it in the refrigerator or tightly fitting containers.
  6. Regularly clean up food scraps and keep garbage in closed containers to make it harder for cockroaches to find food.
  7. Eliminate plumbing leaks, dripping faucets and condensation problems to discourage most types of cockroaches.
  8. Repair grouting in tiles to facilitate cleaning and to prevent cockroaches hiding in tiling.
  9. Seal crevices along baseboards or work surfaces and around pipe runs and electrical outlets and conduits, to reduce cockroach hiding places and routes for cockroach dispersal.
  10. Get rid of old grocery bags, cardboard boxes, and other clutter that provide hiding places for cockroaches and makes cleaning, inspection and pesticide application difficult.

How You Can Benefit from the Services of a Professional Pest Control Operator
In many parts of the world the quality of life, and life expectancy itself, is severely impacted by pests. For instance, every day in Africa, 3,000 people die from malaria transmitted by insects. Pests used to have a devastating impact on Americans too, spreading diseases such as malaria and yellow fever. Pests were a major reason that 200 years ago, Americans had a life expectancy of less than 20 years. Just prior to World War II, thousands of Americans were still dying each year from malaria, and from diseases which can be carried by cockroaches, such as cholera, typhoid, dysentery and gastroenteritis.

Nowadays, Americans enjoy a higher quality of life and greater freedom from pest-borne disease than ever before. One reason is the development of more efficient, environmentally acceptable pesticides. According to the Environmental Protection Agency, "The use of pesticide products on farms, in the home and garden, and in commercial establishments has brought many benefits to all of us.. pesticides have brought under control many insect-carried diseases such as malaria, typhus and yellow fever, thus saving millions of lives." The EPA further states: "Pesticides, used properly and with restraint, improve the quality of our lives enormously."

These are some of the specific benefits of calling in a professional pest control operator (PCO):

  1. Professional PCOs are licensed, certified and insured to carry out pest control operations.
  2. Professional PCOs are trained to observe national, state and local laws, as well as good environmental practices regarding pesticides.
  3. Professional PCOs can identify your cockroach pests and advise you on their economic or public health importance.
  4. Professional PCOs can use their knowledge of cockroach biology and habits to discourage pest entry, dispersal, feeding and breeding, with minimal use of pesticides.
  5. Professional PCOs know how to combine non-chemical measures with the use of pesticides in integrated pest management (1PM) programs.
  6. Professional PCOs have access to a wider range of effective pesticides than homeowners, including pesticides which kill resistant cockroaches.
  7. Professional PCOs are able to select "customer-friendly" products or procedures, which avoid discomfort to occupants or harm to furnishings.
  8. Professional PCOs can provide you with background data on pesticides, including EPA "approved label" and Material Safety Data Sheets.
  9. Professional PCOs have the specialized equipment to treat all sites occupied by cockroaches, including equipment for targeted treatments of crevices and voids.
  10. Professional PCOs are experts who can relieve homeowners of the worry and uncertainty of dealing with cockroach problems themselves.

10 Things Everyone Should Know About Cockroaches
Did You Know?
  1. Cockroaches are the No.1 indoor pest in most countries of the world and can infest even the cleanest buildings.
  2. Cockroaches originated more than 100 million years before dinosaurs, and have now occupied our planet for more than million years.
  3. Cockroaches can become established wherever people live, travel or work, including homes, hotels, hospitals, restaurants, and even on ships, trains and aircraft.
  4. Cockroaches carry numerous disease organisms, including bacteria, viruses and fungi, which they can pick up in drains, sewers, etc. and transfer to human food and utensils.
  5. About 15 million Americans are allergic to cockroaches, and exposure to environments contaminated by cockroaches is a significant cause of asthma.
  6. Cockroaches cause serious economic losses by eating, staining or tainting our possessions. They can even wreck computers and other electronic equipment by causing short circuits.
  7. Cockroaches can survive by eating almost anything, from meat to paper, and by drinking anything from beer to human urine.
  8. Cockroach infestations often go unnoticed, and are hard for untrained personnel to deal with, because cockroaches are mostly nocturnal and spend 75% of their time hiding.
  9. Cockroaches can produce thousands of offspring within a year, and a single building may ultimately contain more cockroaches than the population of people in a large city.
  10. Some populations of cockroaches have developed resistance to many of the pesticides sold over-the-counter to homeowners.

This article was provided by Atlantic Termite and Pest Control

 

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