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604-837-5232 604-566-0792
American Cockroach

(Length: 1 1/2" – 2")
The American Cockroach is the largest of the roaches infesting homes.
Hospitals and warehouses are also targets. It has reddish brown wings
and is a good flyer. American Cockroaches often invade from sewer
systems and heavily mulched areas. Grocery packages are also a favorite
transport. The female attaches the egg capsule, containing about 12
eggs, in high areas in garages, closets, utility rooms and fireplaces.
The young mature in 12 months. Found nearly anywhere in the house,
American Cockroaches contaminate food, carry disease, damage book
bindings, fabrics and wallpaper.
German Cockroach

(Length: 1/2" – 5/8")
This roach, with two dark brown vertical stripes behind the head, is
found throughout the world, thriving wherever man lives, eating the
same foods, sharing the same habitats. It is commonly found in
restaurants, kitchens and stores where food, moisture and harborage are
abundant. German roaches are rarely seen outdoors. Populations build
rapidly from egg capsules being produced about every 20 to 25 days.
Each capsule contains 30 to 35 eggs. The young mature in four to six
months. German roaches contaminate food, leave stains, create foul
odors and carry disease organisms. They hide during the day, closely
packed in small cracks and crevices near food and water.
Oriental Cockroach

(Length: 1” to 1 ¼ ”)
These pests often called water bugs are actually cockroaches. They are
usually shiny black, but may vary to dark reddish brown. In many areas,
the oriental cockroach survives quite well outdoors and is typically
found under debris, stones and leaf litter, but can easily survive
indoors as well. They usually enter buildings via door thresholds,
under sliding glass doors and along utility pipes. They are most
commonly found in basements, crawlspaces, kitchens, and other damp
areas, hence their name.
Clovermite

(Length: 1/64”)
These pests, which are plant feeders, show preferences for bluegrass
and fescue lawns. It has also been shown that they prefer lawns which
are well fertilized and watered. Clover mites thrive in the spring and
fall, are not too fond of the summer heat and usually hibernate from
June until September. They will often enter a home or business around
windows and doors and often congregate around walls with a brick
exterior. If found inside you should not touch them. Although they
won’t sting or bite, they crush very easily which may cause staining on
walls, drapes, or carpet. Try a vacuum with a hose attachment to pick
them up.
Box Elder Bug

(Length: ½”)
This pest which gets its name from the trees it infests, is more a
problem for homeowners based on its over wintering habits. Box elder
bugs like several other pests will try to come inside during colder
months to stay warm and hibernate through the winter. Typically they
will enter on the south or west sides of a home, and often are
attracted to light colored houses. Once inside they are pretty docile,
and pose no threat. As spring approaches and the weather warms they
will try to get out, with some inadvertently coming inside instead.
Exclusion along with regular exterior treatments is the best prevention
for these pests.
Silverfish

(Length: 3/8" – 1/2")
These slender, wingless insects are common in homes. The Silverfish are
covered with shiny and silver or pearl-gray scales with three long
tail-like appendages and two threadlike antennae. The scales help them
escape the grip of ants and spiders. Silverfish cause damage by eating
foods, cloth or other items high in protein, sugar or starch. They eat
cereals, moist wheat flour, paper on which there is glue or paste, book
bindings, wallpaper, starch in clothes and linens. They will breed in
bookcases, storage boxes and linen closets. Oval white eggs are dropped
in a few places week after week. Eggs hatch in two to eight weeks with
adulthood reached in about two years. They thrive in moist hot areas
from the attic to the crawl space.
Flea

(Length: 1/32" – 1/16")
Fleas are small, hard-bodied, wingless insects with a flattened body
and legs adapted for jumping on to a host. The cat flea, most commonly
encountered in Florida, seeds mammals for the blood meal needed to
sustain them. They can be a direct health hazard, transmitting disease
and tapeworm. Humans are often attacked when other food sources aren’t
available. Their bite leaves a red, itchy spot on the skin. Their
saliva is irritating to the host, causing dermatitis and hair loss in
allergic animals.
Tick

(Length: 1/16" – 1/2")
The tick is an eight-legged relative of the spider. It must feed three
times before hiding and producing up to 3,000 eggs in a crack or
crevice. The tick can live without food for up to 200 days, waiting for
a host, usually a dog, to supply a blood meal. Many serious diseases
can be transmitted through ticks: Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever, Typhus,
Lyme Disease, Relapsing Tick Fever and other disorders.
Black Widow Spider

(Length: 3/8" long)
The Black Widow is glossy black with a red hourglass marking on the
underside of its abdomen. The female is much larger and more distinctly
marked than the male. It makes a strong, sticky irregular web in
protected areas where prey is likely to wander in and be trapped.
Foundations, vents, shrubs, outside seats, trash and woodpiles at
ground level are common habitats. Their poisonous venom can cause
concern for small children and older or sickly persons. Medical
attention should be sought if bitten.
Brown Recluse Spider

(Length: 1/4" – 1/2")
The brown recluse is a brownish spider with a distinctive violin-shaped
mark behind its eyes, which has earned it the name "fiddle-backed"
spider. It is found in undisturbed areas such as sheds, garages and
dark closets. Garments left hanging, coats and shoes are favorite
spots. Their bite causes a severe systemic reaction that develops a
crust and a surrounding red zone. The crust falls off, leaving a deep
crater, which may take several months to heal. The crater may require
extensive medical attention.
Black Carpenter Ant

(Length: 1/4" – 1/2")
These ants are completely black instead of two-toned. The black
carpenter ant does damage to sound, undamaged wood. They don’t eat
wood, but they hollow out "galleries" in wood for nesting that are so
smooth they appear to be finished by sandpaper. They normally nest in
dead portions of trees, stumps or logs and invade homes in search of
food. They feed on living or dead insects and nearly all sweets or
meats inside and outside of the home. They will often be found in homes
around windows, doors, decks and gutters. All of these areas may have
wood softened by water, which makes it more attractive to these pests.
Odorous House Ant

(Length: 1/16”–1/8”)
The odorous house ant is quickly becoming the most common ant to infest
homes in our area. They are similar in size, shape and color to
pavement ants and will readily nest indoors. The easiest way to
identify them is when they are crushed: They give off an odor like
coconut or citronella. These ants will have larger nests, and since
they easily live indoors, they may be harder to control. Their
preferred meal is honeydew produced from aphids, but they will readily
eat sweets and protein of all types.
Pavement Ant

(Length: 1/16”–1/8”)
These are the most common ants in the Mid-west. They are generally
black and most often will nest outdoors coming into homes and
businesses only to forage for food. They will feed on almost anything,
including meats, sugar and bread. Many times, a single ant will be seen
only to be followed by many more. This forager will go back to the nest
and bring others to the food source that was found inside the home.
Pharaoh Ant

(Length: 1/12" – 1/16")
These small red-to-yellowish ants can be found trailing anywhere within
a structure. They can nest in wall voids, cabinets, boxes of food and
any other accessible crevices and spaces. They are known to invade sick
rooms and feed on blood plasma and wound dressings. Their colonies have
multiple queens and can split into small groups, spreading very
rapidly. In subtropical areas, Pharaoh Ants readily nest outside in
leaf debris found on or near structures. Re-invasion of the structure
can occur during warm periods. These ants should not be sprayed with
insecticides. This will cause a budding of nests to occur, which causes
ants cut off from the colony to start a new colony elsewhere in the
home or building.
Earwig

(Length: 3/8" to 1")
Earwigs were named by a superstition that the insect would crawl into
people’s ears when they are asleep. More easily recognized by its
forceps-like tail appendage, the Earwig is a major garden pest as well
as an annoying household pest. It is one of the few insects that takes
care of its young. Earwigs feed on green plants and other vegetation
and do little damage indoors. The pinch of their forceps is neither
painful nor poisonous, but does an effective scare job.
Springtail

(Length: 1/32”–1/8”)
Springtails, sometimes referred to as sand fleas, are often just an
outdoor nuisance. They get their name from the fact that they have a
small springlike appendage on their underside that allows them to hop
in the air if disturbed. They will usually infest damp areas around a
home, such as mulch beds. Since springtails are so small, the moisture
in their environment controls their actions. After a rain, these pests
will often be more prevalent as there is less chance of dehydrating.
If there is little or no rain, they may look to new environments, such
as your home, for shelter.
House Cricket

(Length: 3/4")
The tan House Cricket can be found in warm, damp, dark places, such as
shrubs, grass, basements or crawl spaces. Active mostly at night, they
will eat almost anything they can chew from rugs to drapes, and they
usually enter a building from harborage right outside. Their common
song is a triple chirp. Their courtship song is a continuous trill.
Ladybugs

(Length: 1/32”–3/8”)
Ladybugs are generally beneficial insects. Originally bred to combat
aphids and scale insects, these pests have a certain knack for nuisance
when they spend the winter inside homes and businesses. They enter
buildings in the fall to escape the coming cold of winter. They are
most often attracted to light-colored walls and will usually appear on
the south and west walls that typically face the sun during the winter.
Once inside, they will huddle inside walls and basements until the
outside warms up again and signals their escape. The problem is they
don’t have a good sense of direction, and instead of returning
outside, they may enter your home again by mistake. The best control
inside is a vacuum cleaner to remove the pests. Spraying inside walls
is not effective.
Pill Bug

(Length: 1/4" - 3/8")
Pill Bugs are found in lawn turf, under leaves or other moist areas of
decaying vegetable matter. Extremes of wet, dry or hot weather drive
them inside, where they do no damage, but are an annoyance. Pill Bugs
roll into a ball or "pill" when they are disturbed.
Millipede

(Length: 1" – 1 1/2")
Brownish and worm-like in appearance with many body segments,
Millipedes have two pairs of legs on each segment. They typically live
outside in moist vegetation, leaf litter and mulch and feed on decaying
organic wood and plant matter. When conditions are right, migrations
can occur, and large numbers will find their way inside homes through
cracks and crevices. When disturbed, they curl up like a watch spring.
Centipede

(Length: 1" – 2")
A Centipede’s color varies and depends on the species, but most are
brown to orange-brown with many body segments. Unlike Millipedes,
Centipedes have only one pair of legs per segment. They usually live
outdoors in dark, moist areas and are seldom seen inside homes, except
for the house Centipede, which is identified by its extremely long
legs. The house Centipede is usually found where dampness occurs. They
are nocturnal, and when disturbed, they move swiftly towards dark
hiding places. 604-837-5232 604-566-0792
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