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RI, MA EHS Pest Control Blog

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American Cockroaches

07 Nov 2012

Posted by Joseph Coupal

Every visit = dozens upon dozens of American Cockroaches being caught on our insect monitors. Dozens more seen alive in the basement and boiler room. Tenants in the lower level floors were seeing them in their apartments. Treatment was suppression not elimination of the issue. It was like a band aid on a bullet wound! We told the property management firm that we must find the source! We said with absolute confidence that it was under the slab. Sure enough the slab was jack-hammered and PVC pipes were found broken and uncapped. In fact these pipes need to be lead not plastic! These were pipes leading to the water system of the city so roaches had a direct run from the city water system in the streets directly into the apartment building!

(click image to enlarge)

The pipes were fixed and the roach issue was solved! TRUST the expert advice that EHS offers and a solution will follow!

John D. Stellberger
President
Environmental Health Services, Inc.

Pest Control, RI, Pest Control, MA 

Why Roaches Need Their Friends

18 Jul 2012

Posted by Joseph Coupal

Why Cockroaches Need their Friends

The much maligned cockroach is more sophisticated, and social, than we thought, according to new research.

They hide away, unseen, lurking in dark corners and crevices.

When they emerge, they aimlessly scurry and swarm, often around our houses, kitchens and supposedly dirty hotels and restaurants.

We end up despising them for their natural behaviour, seeing them as nothing more than pests to be avoided, exterminated even.

But cockroaches have in many ways been given a raw deal.

Scientists are discovering that these supposedly crude, and creepy automatons are much more sophisticated than we thought.

By unveiling the secret lives of these insects, they are finding out that cockroaches are actually highly social creatures; they recognise members of their own families, with different generations of the same families living together.

Cockroaches do not like to be left alone, and suffer ill health when they are.

And they form closely bonded, egalitarian societies, based on social structures and rules. Communities of cockroaches are even capable of making collective decisions for the greater good.

By studying certain species of cockroach, we may even be able to learn some insights into how more advanced animal societies evolved, including our own.

Living Among Us

A small proportion of insect species are renowned for their social skills.

Ants, termites and some bees and wasps, for example, are "eusocial insects", which have highly developed social structures and behaviours.

But while cockroaches were known to be gregarious, based on their tendency to live in groups at various stages in their lives, we understood little about how they actually behave around each other.

Cockroaches that do not hang out with one another suffer "isolation syndromes". For example, young German and American cockroaches left alone take longer to moult into new larger forms and eventually become adults.

Their later behaviour is also severely affected; young isolated cockroaches find it harder to join a community and mate later in life.

Young cockroaches, it seems, need to be around and in constant physical contact with one another to properly develop.

George Williams,
General Manager - Staff Entomologist

Pest Control, RI, Pest Control, MA 

Cockroaches Plague Restaurants

27 Apr 2012

Posted by Joseph Coupal

Cockroaches: A Plague for Restaurants

You know them when you see them.

The ribbed, icky brown shell encasing the inch-long body. The six sticky legs. The small black head sporting two long antennae.

They are cockroaches — and chances are, they will find their way into a restaurant sooner or later.

“The situation with roaches in restaurants is that it’s not so much a constant battle as fighting every now and then,” said Joseph Davidson, district manager of Topeka-based Schendel Pest Service. “But it’s not a matter of if. It’s always a matter of when. Nobody is immune to having pests.”

Not everyone considers that to be the case, and only about 3 percent of restaurants in Shawnee County have had a roach problem in the past year, according to inspections by the Kansas Department of Agriculture. But it is a battle restaurants fight on a daily basis, because once cockroaches are present, they can be difficult to eradicate.

“It’s horrible,” Rick Garner, co-owner of Sweet Pea’s, said of the restaurant’s 17-month fight to remove cockroaches from the 85-year-old building at 1306 S. Kansas Ave. “Once they’ve gotten established, it’s something you’ve got to do constantly. You’ll never get completely rid of them. It’s almost impossible.”

THE ISSUE

At least 24 restaurants have had roach problems in the past 13 months, according to KDA inspections from Jan. 31, 2011, through Feb. 3 of this year. Eight of the restaurants — including Bobo’s Drive In, 2300 S.W. 10th Ave., Sweet Pea’s and Sakura Restaurant of Japan, 5632 S.W. 29th St. — have had roaches on more than one inspection in that time.

Bobo's had about 20 live roaches and 22 dead roaches on site during its latest inspection on Jan. 3. Owner Richard Marsh said battling the critters is a "continuous process."

"It's something we never rest at," he said, adding that Schendel comes once, sometimes twice, a month to treat and inspect the diner. "It's not an unsafe place to eat. We follow the rules and definitely take the proper steps."

Having roaches on site, dead or alive, is considered a critical violation by the KDA because the insects are vectors for disease. Roaches have been linked to the spread of such diseases as dysentery, gastroenteritis, cholera and hepatitis B. They also can carry salmonella, E coli, and other bacteria and pathogens that cause human illness.

Although each critical violation — infractions more likely to cause food-borne illness — is serious, repeat offenses are fined differently. Live roaches on site carry the heaviest fine — of $500 — on the third consecutive offense. The fourth offense results in a two-day suspension.

Pest control services have an arsenal of treatments for the vermin, ranging from growth inhibitors, which block roaches from reaching maturity, to sticky traps and bug bombs. Most restaurants have pest services out once a month, Davidson said, but without the restaurants’ help, those inspections can only go so far.

“If pests are gone, but the manager or owner doesn’t fix any conditions, it’s easier for pests to return and re-establish,” he said.

Depending on the level of cooperation from the restaurant and size of infestation, he said, roaches can take anywhere from one to three months to eradicate.

Restaurants can do their part, he said, by keeping a clean environment and maintaining a sound building. That means fixing chips in tiles and holes in walls because they can serve as points of entry, as well as hiding spots for food.

Davidson said finding cockroaches in restaurants is fairly common for Schendel employees, who service more than 800 restaurants in six states. One reason for that, he said, is because pests enter facilities through several sources, whether it is on foot, on a customer or in a produce shipment.

But the main culprit behind cockroaches encroaching on restaurants, he said, is us.

"Pests want three things: food, water and shelter," Davidson said. "We provide them all three with our own existence."

Although Davidson insists cockroaches are an inevitability for restaurants, not everyone buys into the theory.

“I have been an inspector in field, and I guarantee you that is not true,” Nicole Hamm, KDA inspection manager, said of claims that every restaurant has cockroaches.

THE FIGHT

Sweet Pea’s has been battling roaches since it moved into 1306 S. Kansas Ave. in June 2010, Garner said. It and Sakura each have had four inspections in the past 13 months with roaches — the most of any in Shawnee County.

Calls to Sakura weren’t returned.

Garner, co-owner of Sweet Pea's, blamed the aging building, inherited conditions from the previous owner and a lousy pest company — which the restaurant replaced in the fall — for the restaurant's continued roach problems.

On its most recent inspection — Jan. 31 — the restaurant had about 40 dead cockroaches. Most were found in the basement and downstairs dining room, which seats people once every other month, Garner said. As of Friday, it hadn’t had a follow-up inspection.

The restaurant hasn’t seen a live cockroach in almost three weeks, he said, and has the roach problem “under control.” Its new pest control company comes out once a month, he said.

Although having pests in restaurants is inevitable, Davidson said, that fact shouldn’t scare people from dining out.

“It’s there,” he said of the cockroach problem, “and we’re still here. We’re still alive. Almost all restaurants around will be very diligent in trying to keep something like that out of their restaurant to keep their food safe."

His advice: Judge a restaurant by what you can see.

“If it’s dirty out where you sit and eat, the kitchen probably isn’t better,” he said.

And that is exactly what the proprietors of Sweet Pea’s want patrons to do.

“We keep this place as clean as any restaurant in town,” Garner said.

George Williams,
General Manager - Staff Entomologist

Pest Control, RI, Pest Control, MA 

Roach Facts Part II

12 Sep 2011

Posted by Joseph Coupal

Did you know that a roach can live a week without a head? It dies after a week due to lack of water. Here are some more interesting facts about roaches.

  • It's hard to sneak up on a roach. They have one great big nerve connecting their tails to their heads, alerting them to danger from behind.
  • Roaches have faster reflexes than humans.
  • Roaches can swim and hold their breath for 40 minutes.
  • They recognize family and friends by their distinctive odors.
  • Male cockroaches weigh less than female cockroaches, and males can fly and flee faster.
  • Crushed cockroaches can be applied to a stinging wound to help relieve the pain.
  • Cockroaches can climb walls because they are equipped with a set of little claws on their feet designed for that very purpose.

George Williams
General Manager - Staff Entomologist

Pest Control, RI, Pest Control, MA

Flies Reproducing in the Thousands in Stagnant Water

13 Dec 2010

Posted by Joseph Coupal

2,000 Maggots in Stagnant Water
 

The correct terminology is larva or larvae. For all intents & purposes they are MAGGOTS! I happen to snap this picture of something that happens in every city & town and that is flies. What you are looking at is about 2,000 maggots in some stagnant water in a garbage can cover. In about 5-7 days these 2,000 maggots will be 2,000 flies. Those flies will continue to reproduce in alarming volumes and at a very fast pace. In fact that 2,000 flies if uncontrolled & they survive can easily be 100,000 in just 30 days!!!

Most people see a roach or rodent in a restaurant, their business, or their home and they freak out and need something done immediately. It is the fly that should cause this type of reaction in people yet all we do is swat at them & do not give them a 2nd thought. We even joke about them….

Waiter, there is a fly in my soup!
What’s he doing?
I believe it is the backstroke.

Flies are one of the most disgusting insects on the planet and they are capable of transmitting so many diseases through the bacteria they contact. Next time you see a fly take it VERY seriously!


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