Archive for July, 2011

Jul 31, 2011 – Good For One, Good For All?

QUESTION:

I have a question in regards to service for cluster flies. We would like to use Talstar Pro but it does not list cluster flies, but does list flies. Do you know if this is good for cluster flies or do you have another option that you have heard works well for cluster flies?

ANSWER:

Most states continue to allow the use of a pesticide for any pest that occurs on a labeled site as long as the Label for that product does not specifically prohibit use for non-labeled pests or has any other restrictive wording. For example, the recent RMD (Rodenticide Mitigation Decision) required rodenticide manufacturers to place the words “for use ONLY for” on their labels for products used for the house mouse and for Norway and roof rats, clearly restricting the use to only these three species. There may be similar statements on many insecticides, but most often the product labels are vague for a reason, and that reason is to allow flexibility on the part of the end user – the professional in pest management. In our resource on PestWeb listing all of the products for various pests and various sites we often take it down only to the basic level – flies, cockroaches, spiders – and not to specific house flies, german roaches, black widow spiders, because that is as far as the Label goes.

So, in my opinion if the product is labeled for “flies” then it gives you the judgment call to use it for any kind of fly pest you encounter as long as you are using it in a manner allowed by the Label and on a site allowed by the Label. Since cluster fly management does include the use of residual insecticides this would probably be an effective material to use in some settings, such as applying it to resting sites indoors or outdoors as long as that site is on the label (attic, wall void, exterior surfaces of structures, etc.) Yes, pyrethroids like bifenthrin are good products for fly management, but it is possible that a different formulation may be more effective.

Microencapsulated products, and we have quite a few different brand names now, offer a few benefits over other formulations of products applied as liquid sprays. They hold up better once exposed to the environment, and if you are treating exterior surfaces for cluster flies that are gathering on the outside walls you want the product to last as long as possible. The microscopic capsules may be more inclined to adhere to the flies that land on that treated surface or walk across it, giving the fly a better opportunity to be exposed to a lethal dose of the active ingredient.

In general cluster flies should be controlled with the combination of good exclusion to prevent their entry into the structure, possibly placing UV light traps into larger void areas the flies occupy in the winter, and using insecticides within the voids where they are gathering as well as on the surfaces in the fall outside when the flies begin to congregate.

View past Ask Mr. Pest Control questions.

Jul 28, 2011 – What’s The Buzz?

QUESTION:

I have a customer who owns a recyling center. He has bees swarming on top of the aluminum cans which are in a 40ft. container with an open top. I do not want to spray any chemicals on the cans because they are being recycled. Do you have any ideas?

ANSWER:

This is always a very difficult problem, where bees or wasps are attracted to a food resource. I will go out on a limb here and assume that this customer of yours is not inclined to make any particular changes himself in the way things are being done there. He has bees that he does not want around and expects you to just make them go away. I will say that there really aren’t any repellents that could be used, so that is out. If the sweet odors from the cans continues to exist it is going to continue to attract bees, so that cannot be changed. So, what we are down to is that the bees are going to come to this facility and your choices are either to kill them all or to prevent them from getting to the cans.

Killing the bees (or could it be yellowjackets) is going to be difficult. If it is yellowjackets then perhaps you have a chance by offering bait stations around the facility, using one of the two residual insecticides currently labeled for use in yellowjacket baiting (Onslaught and CyKick). Only yellowjackets will be drawn to this kind of bait, not honeybees, and it would be very limited due to competition from the recycled cans and their attractive odors. Even if you were allowed to use some insecticides that would effectively kill bees this would become a course of frustration. Whatever you sprayed would either be removed shortly afterward or the insecticide active ingredient would degrade rapidly, requiring you to make constant applications of the material, which somehow does not seem like a good idea.

I don’t have any wonderful brainstorms on this, but if there is some way to exclude the bees this is a goal you should work toward, and it is going to have to involve the customer to change the practices currently in effect. I am picturing bins that are 40 feet long, rather than 40 feet high, and hopefully this is correct. The open top is obviously for the convenience of the workers who regularly dump another load of cans into the bin. I say this naively, but is there any way to put a lid on that bin that could be opened each time a load needs to go into it? Could it be covered with a plastic tarp that is removed and then replaced? I have dropped by recycling centers many times myself and I know very well the rush hour work they do and the fact that sanitation is not exactly part of their mission statement. The bins are generally filthy and never washed, so there is always going to be that odor of spilled sugary materials that will attract the bees.

Is there any way to enclose these bins within a space that would keep the bees physically away, and yet allow the workers with their forklifts or loaders to push through and empty the cans into the bins? This would take some time and expense to create, but I really do not see pesticides as any kind of an answer here, and certainly not a long range answer to the problem. Changes the practices to exclude the bees would be the better approach to work toward. Unfortunately a look at a number of resources on the internet offers only that sanitation and rinsing of cans are the keys to preventing bees from being a problem at recycling centers, and these just do not seem to be useful options for a commercial recycling center.

View past Ask Mr. Pest Control questions.

Battling bedbugs prove to be a challenge – Times-Argus

BARRE — Barre Housing Authority buildings have had a longstanding problem with bedbugs and on Wednesday the Stowe Pest Control thermal remediation trailer spent another day pumping heat into a few of the units at the North Barre Manor, with an aim to …

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Calif city allows pest control to shoot coyotes – San Diego Union-Tribune

LAGUNA WOODS, Calif. — Reacting to recent coyote attacks on small dogs, Laguna Woods is changing its gun law to allow pest control experts to shoot coyotes. The Orange County Register reports that the City Council approved the changes on Thursday …

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Critter expert discusses newest pests infesting our area – WWAY NewsChannel 3

WRIGHTSVILLE BEACH, NC (WWAY) — Cockroaches, bed bugs and ants, oh my! Hundreds of pest control technicians convened in Wrightsville Beach to share secrets and tips of how to better master bugs and rodents. Though very tiny, some even invisible to the …

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Swarm of bees descends on northern Ohio mall lot – Dayton Daily News

Beekeeper John Schick used an industrial vacuum with a hose to collect the insects as shoppers took photos and video with their mobile phones. Schick says the bees were probably migrating when they got tired and decided to rest on the van. He took the …

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Southern Indiana’s summer war on mosquitoes begins second round – Courier-Journal

Environmental health inspectors across Southern Indiana anticipated an all-out war on mosquitoes after heavy spring rains and flooding set the stage for a huge crop of biting insects this summer. The onslaught materialized as expected last month in a rash …

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Roaches Found At Jacksonville Theater, Restaurants – First Coast News


First Coast News

Roaches Found At Jacksonville Theater, Restaurants
First Coast News
Owners of Mimi's told First Coast News they fired their pest control company and spent $1200 to fix their problems. They reopened after two days. Debbie Chen said she also fired her pest control company. "I called them and said , you know what,

and more »

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City Connection: Contact Vector Control District to report pests – Friday Flyer


Friday Flyer

City Connection: Contact Vector Control District to report pests
Friday Flyer
The Northwest Mosquito & Vector Control District provides vector control services (mosquitoes, flies, rats, Africanized honeybees, black flies and midges) in Canyon Lake and to an area of 250 square miles with a population of over 500000.

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Pesky Pest Summer Infestation – WRGB

Pesky Pest Summer Infestation
WRGB
They're nuisance pests and don't do damage." Carpenter ants can do damage and while their high season is over calls are still coming in. "They do not eat wood" says Graham. "What they'll do though is they'll go into a solid piece of wood and hollow it

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