Pest Info Information

Information

Bed Bugs

Bed Bugs pest controlPreparation Method #1 (minimal residential preparation) :

  • The resident does NOT prepare for initial service other than providing access for pest control technician.

  • Make sure technician can have access to all closets.

  • If possible, move bedroom furniture away from walls so there is three feet space between furniture and walls. The bedbug environment is left undisturbed so that the technician can better evaluate the infestation. An added advantage is that this method eliminates the risk that bedbugs will be disturbed by residents during preparation, and possible to be dispersed throughout the apartment.

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Cockroaches

German Cockroach. This is the most important species of the cockroach in the United States. It is about 1/2” to 5/8” long as an adult. Nymphs and adults of both sexes have dark stripes behind the head. It prefers to live in kitchen and bathrooms of homes and apartments, restaurants, supermarkets and hospitals. The Asian cockroach, Blattella asahinai, is identical to the German cockroach in appearance and lives outdoors in lawn and leaf litter.

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Ants

White Footed ant. White footed ants is a 5-3 mm long, black to brownish-black ant. It is called white footed ant because the “foot” (which actually is the lower part of the leg known as the tarsus) is yellowish-white. White footed ant colonies can become quite large. White footed ants are often found foraging along branches and trunks of trees and shrubs. They feed on plant nectars and honeydew. Because they have such big colonies and many young to feed, large numbers of these ants workers leave the nest to search out food. The inside of a home is a great place to find nest sites and food. Workers are monmorphic, and colonies are polygyne.

Caribbean Crazy ant. A non-native ant that has been seen in Miami area for 50 years. These creatures are golden to reddish brown in color and are the size of the typical fire ant. Although this ant colony is monomorphic, they appear to nest in several locations (called Polydomous) and have multiple queens (called polygamous). What makes this ant so prolific is that their colonies have several hundred thousand individuals. These ants create one big ant society, and drive off any and all others. So that explains why the homeowner has not seen fire or bull ants for the past year-but it‟s still not a desirable way to get rid of those pesky fire ants.

Acrobat ants. Acrobat ants are black, 3 mm long, and hold their abdomens over their heads when dis-turbed. They usually nest outdoors in dead wood, tree holes and firewood, but can nest in wall voids and insulation. They crawl into buildings around windows and electric cables. Worker are monomorphic (one form). Colonies are polygyne (many queens).

Argentine ant. It is usually dark-brown. It is 2mm to 3mm long. It usually nest in exposed or covered soil under logs, debris, firewood and mulch. The ants forage in trails of many workers along sidewalks and foundations, and into buildings, where they forage for food. It is one node on the petiole. Workers are monomorphic, and colonies are polygyne.

Bigheaded ant. Workers are neither major or minor workers; major workers have very large heads. They nest in the soil under logs, mulch, firewood and next to the foundation of buildings. They often trail along sidewalks and and the sides of buildings. They often forage indoors for food and water. The ant is yellowish-brown and is 2mm to3mm long. There are two nodes on the petiole, and colonies are polygyne.

Crazy ant. Its black and 3mm long, it has long legs, and workers move erratically. Colonies are usually found in both moist and dry environments. Outdoors, nests are often in wood, tree holes and in mulch. In-doors, nests are often in wall voids and under stored items. The ant has one node on the petiole. Workers are monomorphic, and colonies are polygyne.

Florida carpenter ant. It is a large ant, 5mm to 10mm, with a yellowish-red thorax and black abdomen. It nest in mulch, logs and in wall voids of houses. It can hollow out wood in order to make its nest, depositing wood pieces nearby. The ant has one node on the petiole. Workers are polymorphic (many sizes), and colonies are monogyne (one queen).

Ghost ant. This ant is 1 mm long with a black head and thorax, and clear abdomen and legs. It usually nest outdoors and forages indoors. The ant has a musty odor when squashed. It has a high need for moisture and is often seen in kitchens and bathrooms. The petiole has one node and is hidden by the abdomen. Workers are monomorphic and colonies are polygyne.

Imported fire ant. It is a reddish-brown and 3 mm to 6 mm long. Fire ants build large mounds in open, sunny areas and can forage indoors. Workers can sting, commonly causing a white pustule to form. The ant has two nodes on the petiole. Workers are polymorphic, and colonies are usually monogyne but some-time polygyne.


Little fire ant. It is golden-brown and is 1 mm to 2 mm long. It nests in soil under logs and debris. It can inflict a painful sting. It has two nodes on the petiole. The head is covered with grooves. Workers are mono-morphic and colonies are polygyne.

Native fire ant. It is reddish-brown to black and is 3 mm to 6 mm long. It builds irregular, crater-shaped mounds in sunny areas. Workers can sting, but no white pustule forms. They can inflict a painful sting when disturbed. The ant has two nodes on the pediole. Workers are polymorphic, and colonies are monogyne or polygyne.

Pharaoh ant. It is a rust-colored and 2 mm long. It usually nests indoors (in wall voids, refrigerator insula-tion, books, etc.). The ant has two nodes on the petiole. Antennae are 12-segmented with a three seg-mented club. Workers are monomorphic and colonies are polygyne.

Termites

Drywood Termites live in dry sound wood and need no contact with the soil. Their colonies are much smaller in size than Sub-terranean Termites with only 6-40 nymphs & 1 soldier by the end of the second year, 40-165 by end of 3rd & 70-700 by end of 4th. Colonies must be 4 years old to be mature enough to swarm. It could take 15 years for a colony to reach 3000 individuals.

Drywoods spend their entire life inside their food source. They have the ability to extract what moisture they need to survive from the material they eat. Drywood Termites are usually detected by swarms or by their distinct fecal droppings or pellets. These pellets are very small in size and have six concaved sides. The color of the pellets will vary with the color of the wood they are feeding on. They are discarded from the nest through “kick holes” or “kickout holes.

Drywood Termite eat both the soft spring wood and the hard summer wood. The galleries have a clean sandpapered appearance but pockets of fecal pellets can be found inside these galleries. Drywoods attack homes and furniture and commonly gain access to attics through open sofits and cracks. They can also be found infesting the wood members of crawl spaces. Carpenter ant damage also has clean sandpapered galleries but are no pel-lets and the frass contains dead ants and insect parts.

There is no true worker caste in the Drywood colony. All the maintenance duties of the nest are performed by nymphs. Nymphs clean, groom and feed the other members of the colony. They chew exit holes for the swarmers that are 7/16 to 1/8 inches. Eventually after 7 instars they will molt into adults becoming either a soldier or reproductive (swarmer). They can become secon-dary reproductive in just 4 molts. The secondary reproductive can start a new colony by divi-sion.

The swarmers range in color from reddish brown to yellow with transparent to gray colored wings. Most swarm in the evening during the summer. Swarmers are 1/2 inch in length and like subs they are attracted to light.

Light Southern Drywood Termite (Incisitermes Snyderi) is one of the most commonly found Drywood Termite in Florida. The swarmers are yellowish to yellowish brown and swarm at night.

Powderpost Termite are a type of Drywood Termite. They have the same biology and habits as normal Drywood Termites but the soldiers look different. The Powderpost Termite has a short, dark, rough, plug-shaped head which is concaved in the front. They swarm at night in May-July. The common Powderpost Termite, Crytotermes Brevis is the most abundant of all Dry-woods in Florida. It is nicknamed the Tropical rough headed, West Indian Drywood, furniture and house termite. It can be introduced to a home through infested furniture. This termite is not found outdoors in nature here in Florida, only inside homes, furniture and other structures.

Subterranean Termites

Subterranean Termite: These are the most important termites when it comes to structural damage. They are more widespread than the other two types of termites and more destructive. Subterranean termites live underground (cryptobiotic) for protection from enemies, extreme temperatures and storms. Ants are enemies of termites yet they can be found inhabiting the same ar-eas of a structure. When storms cause flooding in a nest the termites go into a state of quiescence for several hours.

Termites build tunnels throughout the soil and above ground with the aid of shelter tubes commonly called mud tubes. These tunnels and mud tubes protect subs from desiccation. The RH is nearly 100% deep inside the nest area allowing minimal loss of water through the termite‟s cuticle. The shel-ter tubes are comprised of soil and debris glued together by oral and anal secretions from the work-ers. Termites prefer sandy soils since there is more available (free capillary) water than there is in clay and other soils.

Subs can be distinguished from drywood and dampwood termites three ways, the wings of the alates (swarmers), the mandibles on the soldiers and the pronotum (the segment just behind the head) in the workers.

Subterranean swarmer wings have 2 pig-mented veins along the top margin of each wing. There are no veins crossing between these pigmented veins until the last 1/3 of the wing. Drywood and Dampwood termites have 3 or more pigmented veins with cross veins the entire length of the wing. The only excep-tion to this rule is the Florida Dampwood. It also only has 2 pigmented veins but there is no median vein while the sub has a distinct median vein. The Formosan sub has numer-ous hairs on its wings.

The segment behind the head is called the pronotum. In sub sol-diers and workers this segment is narrow than the head. Drywood and Dampwood termites have pronotums that are the same width as the head. Florida Dampwood has a narrow pronotum.

Subterranean soldiers have smooth mandibles that lack teeth. Drywood and Dampwood termites have teeth on the mandibles of the soldiers. The Florida Dampwood again is an exception to the rule by having smooth mandibles but its head is wider in the back where as the sub soldiers have rectangular shaped heads. The Formosan Sub-terranean termite has an egg shaped head with smooth mandibles.

Caste members in a Subterranean Termite Colony: Primary reproductive = Kings & Queens – Once a colony reaches maturity (typically 3-4 years but can take up to 10 years in poor conditions (weather)) it begins new colonies by send-ing thousands of swarmers (alates) out in to the world. We call this occurance swarming but the official term is „dispersal flights‟. A swarm in a new home indi-cates the home was built over or near a mature colony. The number of swarmers indicates the age and size of the colony. The older and larger the colony the more swarmers it will disperse.

Subterranean termite colonies can reach great numbers of individuals and cover large areas. Their nest is in constant move-ment within the environment. The colony will move up and down in the soil to follow the proper moisture and temperature con-ditions as well as sources of cellulose. Subs like to follow structural guidelines during their constant foraging for food sources. Structures and vegetation sitting in soil surface will create a shadow of cooler, moister conditions during hot summer months. These „thermal shadows‟ create prime foraging conditions for workers.

Spiders

Five species of venomous spiders occur in Florida: the southern black widow, northern black widow, red widow, brown widow and brown recluse. The four species of widow spiders are very similar in shape. All are about 1 1/2” long with legs ex-tended. Their life cycle is also similar. The female lays about 250 eggs in a pear-shaped egg sac that is about 1/2” to 5/8” in diameter. The eggs hatch in about 20 days. As the young spiders mature, they construct a loosely woven web and capture progressively larger prey. In Florida, all the widows except the northern black widow breed year round.

Anyone bitten by a spider should preserve it in rubbing alcohol for positive identification. Most spider bites are not considered dangerous, but if you suspect one of the widow or brown recluse spiders, get medical attention immediately.

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Your Termite & Pest Control Company is now serving the entire Bay Area, Tampa, Pinellas, Ruskin, Palmetto, Bradenton, Sarasota, and south to North Port for now 4+ years. With 15+ years experience in the field from termites to rodents and we also do bees, we are dedicated to serving you.Read More