Archive for July, 2011

Jul 9, 2011 – Baiting For Flies

QUESTION:

We have worked in the past year with Quick Bayt from Bayer for fly treatment and the results were very good. This season Bayer changed the formula and this product does not work very well. Please give me advice for combatting flies efficiently.
Thank you

ANSWER:

The Quick Bayt from Bayer appears to be the trade name they use outside of North America, and within the U.S. at least it is called Maxforce Granular Fly Bait. They likely are much the same product, with imidacloprid as the active ingredient, along with 2 additional ingredients – the attractant Muscalure to enhance the attraction to the bait and the bittering agent Bitrex, which helps to prevent animals and children from eating the bait. I had not heard myself that the ingredients or formulation had changed much recently, but perhaps it did and that information just passed me by.

This bait can be used two ways – either dry as a granule that is scattered where this is an appropriate method or within a fly bait station where the bait needs to be contained. Misting the granules with water will increase the attraction to the bait by flies. It also can be mixed with water and applied as a paint-on slurry to surfaces where the flies gather, such as fences or walls of out-buildings. This causes the granules to stick to the surface and be readily available to the filth flies, such as house flies. If eaten it should cause the death of the fly within 30 minutes, so with luck you can enjoy the results by observing the dead flies lying around.

But, as with any bait for any kind of animal, sometimes the intended target just does not want to eat the bait, and perhaps this is the case for you. If the formula of the Fly Bayt has changed it could be that flies in your area are not as attracted to it. I really doubt that there could be any resistance or immunity to the active ingredient (the imidacloprid), so avoidance of the bait would seem to be more likely. If this is the case my best suggestion when baiting is needed would be to try alternative products, and these could be one of the other granular baits (Elector, Bonanza, Golden Malrin, Stimukil) which may contain other active ingredients and food attractants. There also is Quikstrike fly strips, which can be placed in areas of high fly activity and which kill flies within minutes. Offering alternative products not only increases the likelihood of acceptance, but also helps reduce concerns of resistance beginning to any one ingredient.

Of course, I could never end a sermon on fly management without suggesting that chemical controls should be used only after the other IPM options are put into motion – sanitation, exclusion, habitat modification, etc., as well as the use of non-chemical tools such as light or bait traps. Fly management is very difficult, and is only successful if the whole bag of tools is used.

View past Ask Mr. Pest Control questions.

Jul 8, 2011 – Silverfish Drive-Up Service

QUESTION:

We are servicing a bank on an every-other-month service. The bank is only about 4 years old, and the only problem is silverfish. The only place I find them is at the drive-up window, in the drawers under the counter. One of our techs put a glue board in one of the drawers and I trapped different stages of silverfish. Can you help on this?

ANSWER:

My first thought is about why they may be appearing only at this one location so far, although it’s possible they are hiding other places as well and just not seen so far. Banks can have lots of cubby holes. Perhaps the drive-up window offers some gaps or other openings that are serving as entry points for the silverfish, whereas the rest of this relatively new bank could be pretty well sealed. This might be one thing to carefully evaluate, and if you can find entry opportunities they can be permanently sealed to keep future bugs from getting in. Then you only have to deal with the ones still inside at this time.

Silverfish are common outdoor bugs, so looking around the exterior of the building could reveal other places where the silverfish hide, and these can be removed if they are just piled debris or treated if they must remain in place. You also could treat along the base of the exterior walls, particularly around the area of the drive-up window. I am not fond of recommending insecticide applications as the ONLY procedure, as this then would require you to repeat the application every time you service the account for every year to come. Insecticide active ingredients are not going to last for 60 days outside, so not only would you have to constantly apply, but also would have those long intervals between services when no effective residual is in place to stop wandering bugs. Much better would be the habitat modification and exclusion when possible, as these then address contributing conditions.

Stopping the silverfish on the outside is better than fighting them on the inside where it’s more sensitive, but inside at this time you might consider very localized treatments along edges and corners in the vicinity of this window. You also could place some bait insecticide, and a granular bait such as Niban or Dekko Silverfish Packets. The Dekko already is in a station and the Niban granular could be placed within an insect bait station. If the bait could be puffed into a wall void in that area that might be useful, but if used where it is exposed it should be contained.

There shouldn’t be much for the silverfish to eat in this area, but what the heck do I know? I’d hate to say that and then start having holes chewed in hundred dollar bills. But, the combination of exclusion to end the entry, residual sprays to intercept the wandering insects, and bait to attract them to a better food source should be helpful.

View past Ask Mr. Pest Control questions.

Go Green: Eco-friendly pest control for the garden – Abington Mariner

As concerns grow about the safety of some popular pesticides, what are the eco-friendly best practices to manage garden pests? Gardening expert Melinda Myers is on the board of directors for the International Society of Arboriculture and has a master’s …

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Dead cicadas clog school cooling towers – msnbc.com

Cooling towers at 19 Metro Nashville schools are being cleaned Wednesday because they are clogged with the dead insects. The first school getting cleaned is Cumberland Elementary. Metro schools said there are “buckets” of the insects in the cooling systems.

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County reports first West Nile samples of season – Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Allegheny County health officials found three West Nile Virus samples in insects this week — the first cases discovered during a particularly mosquito-heavy summer. The virus-carrying mosquitoes were found in Homewood, Point Breeze and Monroeville on July …

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Mosquitoes under control, county officials say – Brownsville Herald

Mosquitoes under control, county officials say
Brownsville Herald
When he does have mosquitoes in his precinct, he hires a licensed pest control contractor to spray, he said. But in the southern part of the county, there is a volunteer firefighter who is a licensed pesticide applicator, he said.

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Pesticides in Canada are safe to use – Vancouver Sun

Pesticides in Canada are safe to use
Vancouver Sun
While the marketing of "natural" pest control products may make them popular, it is not scientifically sound. So why do these groups persist in their misinformation campaign? The CBC's Marketplace recently analyzed the national Canadian Cancer

and more »

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Destructive pest caught at Wellington airport – Stuff.co.nz


Voxy

Destructive pest caught at Wellington airport
Stuff.co.nz
The species of fruit fly had yet to be identified, but the Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry (MAF) said the Mediterranean fruit fly was one of the world's most destructive fruit pests. When the woman arrived on July 4, fruit fly eggs and maggots
Biosecurity Disaster LoomingVoxy
Biosecurity interceptions at the borderScoop.co.nz (press release)

all 5 news articles »

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Pests eating hostas, ferns – Quad-Cities Times

Our yard is under attack. Last week, Japanese beetles swooped into the front yard and began feasting on several fern-like plants, and bunnies began eating my tiny hosta transplants in the backyard. Now, if you’re asking yourself, “What are bunnies doing …

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APNewsBreak: Insects leading threat to US forests – msnbc.com

TRAVERSE CITY, Mich.  — Marauding insects have become a leading threat to the nation’s forests over the past decade, a problem made worse by drought and a warming climate, a federal report says. Bark beetles, engraver beetles and gypsy moths are the …

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