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RI, MA EHS Pest Control Blog

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Pigeon Feeding Ban Seeks to Penalize Bird Lovers

30 Jan 2013

Posted by Joseph Coupal

If you enjoy feeding the countless pigeons you encounter on your daily adventures, you may want to start tossing food to your feathery friends on the sly.

Image credit: Inquisitr

According to The Huffington Post, Alderman James Cappleman of Chicago’s 46th ward said he wants to impose stricter penalties for those individuals who keep feeding the bothersome birds. In short, tossing bread to the pigeons would become illegal.

The proposed ordinance would certainly make someone think twice before throwing bread crumbs to a loft of pigeons on the sidewalk. In addition to a $1,000 fine, the offender may cool his or her heels behind bars for roughly six months.

“This is our way of saying this is really hurting the community. It’s hurting the businesses. We have to put a stop to it,” Cappleman explained to the Chicago Sun-Times. He added the pigeon population in his ward is growing to the point that some people are afraid to walk through L train stations.

“[The Chicago Transit Authority] has said the pigeon excrement is about a fourth of an inch thick and they’ll clean it and within a week, it’s back to the way it was before,” Cappleman said.

According to UPI, the alderman isn’t alone in his opinion regarding those who continue to feed the pigeons. Bobby Williams said he too feels these people are only adding to the problem.

“They’re a nuisance,” the concerned citizen explained. “They’re everywhere. You know, you could stand there waiting on the bus and they’re all over your feet. I think it should be illegal to feed them.”

NBC Chicago reports that some folks don’t feel the pigeons are as big of a problem as others claim. In their eyes, it just comes with the territory.

“I don’t see the problem with it. The birds stay in one area, that’s it,” resident Chuck Brown said.

George Williams,
General Manager - Staff Entomologist

Pest Control, RIPest Control, MA

Woman Reports ‘Stalker’ Pigeon To Police

28 Jan 2013

Posted by Joseph Coupal

A woman in the western German town of Darmstadt finally reported a pigeon to her local police force, after the over-friendly bird kept “stalking” her by hanging round her house.

Image credit: The Local

The exasperated woman told officers on Monday that the blue-grey pigeon had been a constant presence at her side for the past three weeks. She said the “strange bird” had been hanging round in her garden or on her terrace constantly, and seemed to be looking for some kind of “familial connection.”

The woman claimed that every time she opened the door, the seemingly intelligent pigeon would immediately fly into the house. Her gentle attempts to persuade her unwanted guest to leave proved fruitless, as did her grandson’s deployment of his water pistol.

Even once it had been chased out, the persistent pigeon would perch on a nearby branch and wait for the next opportunity to present its credentials as a potential companion.

But the animal failed to recommend itself: when it did get in, the stubborn animal would “leave traces that no good housewife would want in her home,” the police report said.

When the helpless woman finally went to the authorities, officers were unable to help her, and could only recommend that she seek the advice of a pigeon fancier or an animal psychologist.

But then, before going to the professionals, the fraught woman decided to have another go herself. “Apparently, this time the bird received a clear ‘dismissal’ and flapped off on its own,” the report concluded.

George Williams,
General Manager - Staff Entomologist

Pest Control, RIPest Control, MA   

Inspect for Pests

25 Jan 2013

Posted by Joseph Coupal

If you want a lazy run of the mill pest control firm then you will have no trouble finding one in Massachusetts & Rhode Island. They are a dime a dozen. EHS IS NOT one of them!!! This picture shows you why we are so good at what we do. We take the time to find the pest because a proper inspection means efficient elimination. We owe it to our paying customers to be this detailed! If you want the best for your home or business then call EHS.

Frank Diaz
Wildlife Specialist

Pest Control, RIPest Control, MA

EHS Knows Rats!

23 Jan 2013

Posted by Joseph Coupal

I get amazed at how lazy some companies get when it comes to pest control. If there was ever a pest to not take lightly it is the Norway rat. When they are established + committed to structure you BETTER get aggressive and creative! EHS took on this commercial account after the owner was fed up that the previous pest control company could not solve the rat problem. In fact it had gotten worse. He called in EHS and we knew exactly what needed to be done and we clearly explained this to the business owner and he trusted us. He had to, his reputation & livelihood was at stake! We knew he needed structural exclusion, aggressive service frequency, and numerous traps. No way was rodenticide an option as rats had already breached the structure and a dead rat in a wall would smell for weeks! After four weeks we had removed 30 rats and the problem was solved. We then made recommendations on altering the structure to prevent this from happening again. Just another successful elimination and one very happy client! TRUST EHS for pest SOLUTIONS!

Johnny Maiocchi
Service Specialist

Pest Control, RIPest Control, MA 

Mice In Restaurants

21 Jan 2013

Posted by Joseph Coupal

How clean is the restaurant you eat in? What you don’t know can hurt you! Having inferior pest control service in a restaurant is risky to the business health of the establishment but the true physical health of the general public. The attached image show you a restaurant that EHS took over because the previous company was not solving the mice issue. We at EHS take this protection & responsibility VERY seriously! When you need a commercial pest service provided you do not have to look any further than EHS!

Mike McGoldrick
Service Supervisor

Pest Control, RIPest Control, MA 

Hurricane Isaac Sweeps Thousands of Dead Rats onto Beaches

18 Jan 2013

Posted by Joseph Coupal

Tens of thousands of rats killed by Hurricane Isaac have washed up onto the beaches of Mississippi

Tens of thousands of rats killed by Hurricane Isaac have washed up onto the beaches of Mississippi and created a foul-smelling mess that officials say will take days to clean up, Reuters reports.

When the hurricane lifted the tides, the water washed across the marshy areas in Louisiana where the semi-aquatic rats live and forced them to ride the waves into Mississippi until they succumbed to exhaustion and drowned, said David Yarborough, a supervisor for Hancock County on the Gulf Coast.

The tides then deposited their bodies on the Mississippi shoreline, he said.

As of Tuesday, about 16,000 of the rodents have been collected in Hancock County, where a hired contractor's clean-up efforts are expected to continue for another week, officials said.

In nearby Harrison County, officials decided to carry out the work themselves. Using shovels and pitchforks, workers have removed 16 tons of the dead rats from beaches since Saturday and taken them to a local landfill.

George Williams,
General Manager - Staff Entomologist

Pest Control, RIPest Control, MA 

Delta Passenger's Harrowing Brown Recluse Spider Encounter Ends In $80,000 Settlement

16 Jan 2013

Posted by Joseph Coupal

Add deadly spider bites to your list of nightmare airline travel scenarios.

A Georgia woman who says she was bitten by a brown recluse spider on a Delta Airlines flight in January has won an $80,000 settlement, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution's Johnny Edwards reports.

Brandi DeLaO, 38, was on her way to South Africa when she felt something pinch her thigh. It wasn't until a hand-sized "crusty, oozing mass of dead skin" formed after landing that she sought medical attention.

“I would not wish that on my worst enemy for anything,” DeLaO, 38, told the AJC. “It was horrible. It was amazing that a spider could do all that.”

According to the University of Florida's Department of Entomology, brown recluses often bite on the thigh, upper arm, or stomach, most often after humans unwittingly roll over them in their sleep. DeLaO said she was dozing off at the time.

Thanks to passenger protections under the Montreal Convention, DeLaO walked away with a pretty sizeable settlement. By law, airlines are liable for as much as $175,800 in damages for passengers who are injured during flight.

Most of DeLaO's winnings will likely go toward medical bills. It took three surgeries to stop the venom from spreading and she has another lined up already.

A Delta spokesperson told the AJC an aircraft inspection turned up no spider infestation.

George Williams,
General Manager - Staff Entomologist

Pest Control, RIPest Control, MA 

Yosemite Officials: 1,700 Visitors Potentially Exposed to Hantavirus

14 Jan 2013

Posted by Joseph Coupal

RODENTS & MICE

Visitors who stayed in some of the dwellings in June, July and August, may have been exposed to the disease that also caused two other people to fall ill.

The rustic tent cabins of Yosemite National Park have become the scene of a public health crisis after two visitors died from a rodent-borne disease following overnight stays.

On Tuesday, park officials sent letters and emails to 1,700 visitors who stayed in some of the dwellings in June, July and August, warning them that they may have been exposed to the disease that also caused two other people to fall ill.

Those four people contracted hantavirus pulmonary syndrome after spending time in one of the 91 “Signature Tent Cabins” at Curry Village around the same time in June. The illness is spread by contact with rodent feces, urine and saliva, or by inhaling exposed airborne particles.

After the first death, the park sanitized the cabins and alerted the public through the media that the cause might have been diseased mice in the park.

However, officials did not know for sure the death was linked to Yosemite or the campsite until the Centers for Disease Control determined over the weekend that a second visitor, a resident of Pennsylvania, also had died.

George Williams,
General Manager - Staff Entomologist

Pest Control, RIPest Control, MA 

Weird News: Man Dies After Live Cockroach, Cricket, Worm Eating Contest

11 Jan 2013

Posted by Joseph Coupal

As a Florida medical examiner tries to determine how 32-year-old Edward Archbold died after eating insects during a contest to win a snake, people around the country are asking: Why?

Why would anyone eat a live cockroach? Why did he die when several others in the contest ate the same bugs without incident? What inspired Archbold – who was described by the snake store owner as “the life of the party” – to shovel handfuls of crickets, worms and cockroaches into his mouth?

While eating bugs is normal in many parts of the world, the practice is taboo in the U.S. and many Western countries.

Yet people do it for the shock factor, and many do so during contests or dares; just last year, folks ate Madagascar cockroaches at a Six Flags in Illinois for a chance to win park passes. Also last year, people ate live roaches at the Exploreum Science Center in Mobile, Ala. And a few years back, at Universal Studios in Orlando, contestants in a theme park show purportedly consumed a mix of sour milk, mystery meat and bugs.

Experts point to the rise in reality TV shows and movies such as “Fear Factor” and “Jackass” as egging people on and breaking down the ick factor.

Competitive eaters – like the participants who scarf down hot dogs on Coney Island on the Fourth of July – are quick to distance themselves from stunts like cockroach eating. Competitive eating is regulated, has rules and always has a licensed emergency medical technician on hand at every event.

Lou Manza, a psychology professor at Lebanon Valley College, said folks who participate in extreme events like bug eating “are looking for things to make life interesting.”

“At a certain level we’re all looking for things to break up the monotony,” said Manza, who participates in extreme marathons, which he says some people think is odd. “We’re striving for something that gives life meaning, something beyond the ordinary. The older you get, you start looking for something else.”

Extreme eaters also participate mostly for fame and not material goods – and they train heavily for events. Manza added that amateurs don’t “think things through” when throwing themselves into weird and possibly dangerous competitions.

Case in point: In 2007, a 28-year-old mother of three died after participating in a California radio station contest called “Hold Your Wee for a Wii,” where she tried to drink large quantities of water without urinating in order to win a gaming console. Overconsumption of water throws the body’s electrolyte balance out of whack and can be fatal.

What made Archbold participate in the bug-eating contest is a bit unclear; he had eaten bugs before, said his girlfriend. He had planned on giving the female python to a friend if he won.

Natasha Proffitt, 27, of West Palm Beach, said Archbold told her about the contest just hours before it started on Friday. When she asked him if it was a good idea, he said “it was not a big deal.”

The store, Ben Siegel Reptiles in Deerfield Beach, had been touting the contest for days on its popular Facebook page; earlier on Friday it posted a flyer that said the event was “featuring the soon to be infamous ‘eat bugs for balls’ contest,” referring to the prize of a female ivory ball python.

Sarah Bernard, an entomology student at the University of Florida, attended the contest – held during the store’s “Midnight Madness Sale” – and shot video on her phone of Archbold during the competition.

“I was focusing on him because I was closest to him and he was really entertaining,” she said of Archbold. “I saw that he had a clear strategy. He would push everything into his mouth and try to swallow it with water. He figured out what worked, and he did it.”

She added that the participants competed in several different rounds with different insects, and that the last contest involved the roaches, which were three or four inches long.

“The worm contest happened right before the roach-eating contest. So he ate a very large number of insects,” she said, adding that each round lasted about four minutes.

Archbold won the contest.

Bernard said she did not see Archbold immediately after the competition ended. She recalled that an announcer said “the winner was vomiting somewhere, and we’ll congratulate him when he comes back.”

Archbold, of West Palm Beach, collapsed in front of the store, according to a Broward Sheriff’s Office statement released Monday. He was taken to the hospital where he was pronounced dead. Authorities were awaiting autopsy results to determine a cause of death.

The medical examiner’s office said Tuesday it has sent samples of Archbold’s remains for testing, but results are not expected for another week or two.

“Eating insects in a contest is a recent ‘Fear Factor’ phenomenon,” said Coby Schal, a professor of entomology at North Carolina State University. “But I have not heard of anyone having that type of response.”

He said people may have allergic and asthmatic responses to cockroaches, particularly in homes infested with roaches, and children are very seriously allergic to them. Dust from roaches’ wings and exoskeletons – roaches shed their skins – often triggers asthma in people.

“All insects, if you are allergic to a particular insect, you can have an allergic response to it. Whether he had an allergic sensitivity to a wide variety of insects or just to roaches, there is no way of telling,” Schal said.

Schal said this was likely an allergic response, “but there is always a possibility that cockroaches do carry bacteria and the response won’t be immediate. It would take time for bacteria to be a problem.”

He added that there could be other complications.

“When cockroaches like this die or are sick, they can have bacterial infections,” Schal said. “But the fact that he was the only one affected, it suggests that it’s something about his physiology.”

Mike Tringale, the vice president of The Asthma and Allergy Foundation of America, said it’s possible that Archbold “hit his tolerance level to cockroach allergens” and went into anaphylactic shock.

Tringale said that such a severe reaction to cockroaches is “probably rare,” however.

David George Gordon has made a career out of educating people about edible bugs. His many books include the “Eat-a-Bug Cookbook,” which features a recipe for cockroach samosas. And though he has hosted his own cockroach-eating contests, he is dismayed by events and reality television programs that focus more on the gross-out factor than on showing people the culinary side of insects.

“It’s indirectly bashing other cultures,” Gordon — who goes by the Twitter handle TheBugChef — said in a telephone interview. “We kind of like to think all these other cultures are so suffering from lack of nutrition that they eat bugs. Which is kind of like saying we eat oysters on the half shell because we need protein. This is not about nutrition. This is legitimate comfort food in many parts of the world.”

George Williams,
General Manager - Staff Entomologist

Pest Control, RIPest Control, MA 

The Truth about Cockroaches and Health

09 Jan 2013

Posted by Joseph Coupal

Cockroaches live in a wide range of environments around the world. These pest species prefer warm conditions and thus are commonly found in the buildings of densely populated cities and also in the southern United States. In fact, the Asthma and Allergy Foundation of America reports that 78 to 98 percent of urban homes have cockroaches – with as many as 900 to 330,000 cockroaches per home!

Cockroaches are most active when the temperature is greater than 70 degrees Fahrenheit and they thrive in warm environments with easily accessible food and water. These insects are mainly nocturnal and will run away when exposed to light. Amazingly, some cockroaches have been known to live up to three months without food and a month without water.

Cockroaches have many negative consequences for human health because certain proteins (called allergens) found in cockroach feces, saliva and body parts can cause allergic reactions or trigger asthma symptoms, especially in children.

Cockroach allergy was first reported in 1943, when it was noted that certain patients developed skin rashes immediately after the insects crawled over their skin. Allergy skin tests were developed in 1959, which confirmed patients’ cockroach allergies. Subsequent studies have firmly established that cockroach allergens can act as a trigger for acute asthma attacks.

The National Cooperative Inner-City Asthma Study (NCICAS) found that asthmatic children with both a positive skin prick test to cockroach allergen, and a high exposure to cockroach allergen in the bedroom were more likely to have wheezing, missed school days, nights without sleep, and unscheduled medical visits and hospitalizations for asthma. Approximately 23 percent to 60 percent of urban residents with asthma are sensitive to the cockroach allergens. However, the risk of asthma from cockroach allergen exposure and allergy is not limited to children. The study also found that cockroach allergy was associated with more severe asthma among elderly asthmatics in New York City.

Asthma is a serious, sometimes life-threatening chronic respiratory disease. Unfortunately, it directly affects the quality of life for almost 25 million Americans, including an estimated 7 million children. Millions more are impacted as family members of persons with asthma. Although there is no cure for asthma, it can be controlled through medical treatment and management of environmental triggers – such as cockroach allergens.

Cockroaches can also passively transport microbes on their body surfaces including pathogens that are potentially dangerous to humans. Cockroaches have been implicated in the spread 33 kinds of bacteria, including E. coli and Salmonella species, six parasitic worms and more than seven other types of human pathogens.

E. coli and Salmonella are classic causes of food poisoning, or gastroenteritis. Common symptoms include belly pain, severe stomach cramps and tenderness, diarrhea which can sometimes be bloody, nausea and vomiting. Some people can experience severe diarrhea, which will cause dehydration and may require hospitalization. In rare cases, the bacteria can spread to the blood stream and cause life threatening infections.

People can mitigate cockroach problems and protect their health through barrier exclusion and cleanliness. Barrier exclusion involves preventing cockroaches from entering the home through places, such as small cracks in the walls and spaces near electric sockets, and up through drain traps. Having a clean and sanitary home will make it less inviting to cockroaches.

Five things to do to protect your home and family:

  1. Keep counters, sinks, tables and floors clean and free of clutter. Clean dishes, crumbs and spills right away.
  2. Store food in airtight containers, and always avoid leaving food out (including pet food!).
  3. Seal cracks and gaps in walls, floors and openings around or inside cabinets. Condo- and apartment-dwellers should also seal gaps around plumbing, wall outlets, and switch plates.
  4. Run water periodically in spare bathrooms and little used sinks.
  5. Scan children’s backpacks when they return home, as well as grocery items before storing them.

Source = PESTWORLD.COM

George Williams,
General Manager - Staff Entomologist

Pest Control, RIPest Control, MA


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