AAA Brothers Exterminators,
Inc.
German Cockroach: Adults 9/16 inch long, with
well-developed wings (but they seldom fly). Prefers hot
(85-95(F), humid places, e.g. in kitchens, near stoves,
dishwashers and sinks.
Brown-banded Cockroach: Adults
about 1/2 inch long; will fly when disturbed. Prefers warm
(over 80(F), dry, high-level places, e.g. wall cabinets,
behind pictures and inside television sets and wall clocks.
American Cockroach: Adults 1 1/2 inches long, with large
wings which they use for flying or gliding in warm
locations. Prefers hot (85-95(F), 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:
Adults 1 1/4 inches long, with large wings-an excellent
flyer. Prefers hot (85-95(F), sheltered humid places, living
outdoors (especially in tree holes) in the South and
Southeast but commonly invading homes, often via the eaves.
Oriental Cockroach: Adults about 1 inch long, wings
present but small and functionless in males and absent in
females. Prefers temperate (70-80(F), 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 "hitch-hiking" 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.
AAA Brothers Exterminators
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 300 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 5 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.
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