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National Weather Service meteorologists noticed something puzzling on their radar screens in Southern California on Tues...
06/08/2019

National Weather Service meteorologists noticed something puzzling on their radar screens in Southern California on Tuesday evening — a big green blob.

"It was very strange because it was a relatively clear day and we weren't really expecting any rain or thunderstorms," Casey Oswant, a NWS meteorologist in San Diego, tells NPR. "But on our radar, we were seeing something that indicated there was something out there."

So the meteorologists called a weather spotter in Wrightwood, Calif., near the blob's location in San Bernardino County. Oswant says the spotter told them the mysterious cloud was actually a giant swarm of ladybugs.

The phenomenon is known as a ladybug "bloom," and while this one appears particularly large, Oswant says it's not the first time local meteorologists have spotted the beetles.

On the radar, the cloud of insects looked like a "light rainstorm" — not quite the density of a severe thunderstorm, she says. They were flying about a mile above the ground, she said, in the cloud that was about 10 miles wide.

The mass of beetles was spotted heading south just before 9 p.m. on Tuesday night. The weather watchers lost sight of the cloud overnight, and the ladybugs' current location isn't clear.

California has numerous species of ladybugs. It's not certain what kind made up the cloud, but it's highly likely they are Hippodamia convergens, commonly known as the convergent lady beetle, says Cornell University entomologist John Losey. He runs The Lost Ladybug Project, a citizen science project that tracks native species of ladybug.

Convergent lady beetles are plentiful in California. People across the country buy them because they eat pests such as aphids in the garden.

Losey says convergent lady beetles are migratory: "They'll cycle between the lush valleys in California and then when it starts to warm up, they'll go up in the mountains, where it's a little cooler."

There are three "cues" that determine when the species will move: food resources, temperatures and length of the day, he says. Typically, such large numbers wouldn't be moving at the same time. "But somehow," Losey says, "the combination of cues must have all sort of synchronized so that they went at a very similar time."

Such a large group also may be a sign of the population's health, but there are factors here that could potentially be worrisome, Losey says.

"It's not exactly clear why we're seeing this big swarm now that we haven't before," he says. "Is that just sort of a random effect of what happened in the weather and the prey populations? Is it having something to do with climate change that's sort of condensing when they all are going to fly" or the recent wildfires in California?

"The best news probably would be that there's just a lot of agriculture in California, and maybe conditions are good and so populations are high," Losey says. "The less good news would be that something is happening, that something is affecting their phenology in a way that could put them out of sync with where they need to be safe and where they need to find prey."

It seems that this area of Southern California still has numerous ladybugs, even after the swarm headed south toward Mexico.

For more information about lady bugs, contact EHS Pest.

Source: NPR.org

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Expect the population of mosquitoes to steadily rise this summer season. Aside from those irritating bites and itchy mar...
06/05/2019

Expect the population of mosquitoes to steadily rise this summer season. Aside from those irritating bites and itchy marks, you should be equally or more concerned of the viruses they carry and transmit to humans and pets. Reducing their population is the only way to limit your exposure to mosquito danger. Here are ways you can help eliminate mosquitoes in your home and help in the community's mosquito reduction effort:

* Install a Misting System - You can contact a pest expert to assist you in choosing the best mosquito misting system and teach how to run it. The system release the treatment on a timed schedule.
* Fogging - A fogging machine can be used to fend off mosquitoes outside your home.
* Mosquito Traps - Our pest experts here in MA, RI have special traps that can catch and eliminate mosquito particularly larvae and their breeding sites.
* Remove Standing Water - Standing water are their favorite breeding site. Get rid of any item that collects water.
* Use LED light bulbs - Mosquitoes are attracted to incandescent light bulbs. Replace your outdoor lighting with tinted LED bulbs instead.
* Use Bug Spray - Whenever you go outdoors make sure to use bug spray to repel mosquitoes.

For more information on how to control mosquitoes, contact EHS Pest.

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The good news is that two trash-strewn downtown Los Angeles streets I wrote about last week were cleaned up by city work...
06/04/2019

The good news is that two trash-strewn downtown Los Angeles streets I wrote about last week were cleaned up by city work crews and have been kept that way, as of this writing.

The bad news is that I didn’t have to travel far to find more streets just as badly fouled by filthy mounds of junk and stinking, rotting food.

Then there was the news that the LAPD station on skid row was cited by the state for a rodent infestation and other unsanitary conditions, and that one employee there was infected with the strain of bacteria that causes typhoid fever.

What century is this?

Is it the 21st century in the largest city of a state that ranks among the world’s most robust economies, or did someone turn back the calendar a few hundred years?

We’ve got thousands of people huddled on the streets, many of them withering away with physical and mental disease. Sidewalks have disappeared, hidden by tents and the kinds of makeshift shanties you see in Third World places. Typhoid and typhus are in the news, and an army of rodents is on the move.

On Thursday I saw a county health inspector on rat patrol between 7th and 8th streets on skid row. He was carrying a clipboard and said he had found droppings and other evidence of rodents, and I asked where:

“Everywhere,” he said.

Well, it’s nice to know somebody is doing something, but you don’t need a clipboard. I’ve seen so many rats the last two weeks in downtown Los Angeles, I have to suspect they’re plotting a takeover of City Hall, which vermin infiltrated last year.

The city of Los Angeles has become a giant trash receptacle. It used to be that illegal dumpers were a little more discreet, tossing their refuse in fields and gullies and remote outposts.

Now city streets are treated like dumpsters, or even toilets — on Thursday, the 1600 block of Santee Street was cordoned off after someone dumped a fat load of p**p in the street. I’m not sure when any of this became the norm, but it must have something to do with the knowledge that you can get away with it. Every time sanitation crews knock down one mess, another dumpsite springs up nearby.

You wanna take a tour with me of how things looked Wednesday and Thursday?

OK, the shovels were still out on Crocker Street, which was looking pretty good, so I went over to East 10th Street and Naomi Avenue, several blocks away, near the Coca-Cola distribution center.

The north side of 10th Street looked like a landfill. Trash was scattered in the street and on the sidewalk, and there was a little bit of everything. Splintered lumber, metal poles, soiled blankets and clothing, a sofa, buckets, boxes.

“Trucks come by and run over the trash,” said Ron Riego, 60, who lives under a tarp on the corner and pointed out where some of the debris has been flattened by traffic.

Riego said he was just back from the hospital, where he was treated for congestive heart failure and water on the lungs. On returning to his tarp, he discovered that someone had set fire to some of his belongings. Now he was sorting through his things to see what was salvageable, and planning to move a few feet to the west.

“Rats chased me out,” he said, so he was surrendering his lean-to to the rodents.

“Someone came by in the middle of the night and dropped all those bags,” Riego said, telling me such dumps were common. “I looked out and saw a nice new white pickup truck stop and toss everything, then he took off,” he said.

The bags, some of which were split open, contained spoiled fruit and trimmings from pineapples and mangoes. That part of town has a lot of produce wholesalers, and it’s no secret that some of the illegal dumping is done by local merchants and customers. Nor is it any secret that food scraps attract rats.

At East 16th Street and Compton Avenue, just south of the 10 Freeway, trash billowed at the corner and tapered gradually to the east along a building tagged with graffiti. The debris included boxes, bulging trash bags and a crushed Lime scooter. The centerpiece was a heaping shopping cart.

I saw a few encampments nearby and standing, murky green water in the gutters. Were the drains clogged with trash? Is a water or sewer line leaking? You just never know, and you almost don’t want to think about it. I go through a lot of antibacterial wipes after a day here, and I take my shoes off before I enter my house. It’s horrifying to think about how many people live in the middle of all that muck.

I went back to 16th and Compton the next day to find a city crew cleaning up the mess, and I spoke to James Campbell, who runs the uniform rental company on that corner.

“I call the city and they usually come within a week, but then it’s always piled right back up again,” said Campbell.

“I don’t even like stepping out here because of the needles,” said Campbell, who told me he cringes when customers come to his office and witness what’s at his doorstep.

“It’s embarrassing,” he said.

Yes, but it’s not Campbell who should be embarrassed. It’s L.A. Mayor Eric Garcetti and the 15 members of the City Council who run the city and have not responded with the urgency necessary to deal with the homelessness and trash problems that plague Los Angeles.

They alone did not create the social and economic woes that have contributed to the city’s major problems, and it’s not as if they’ve been completely unresponsive. About 27,000 people were housed last year, for instance. But even more people have ended up in their cars and on streets and riverbeds, and taxpayers are right to wonder why City Hall keeps losing its most important battles.

When I called Councilman Jose Huizar’s office about the trash piled on Ceres Avenue, a staffer told me issues like that are complaint-driven, and if no one has called, the office might not know the problem exists.

What, they don’t have eyes?

Look, I know Huizar might be a little distracted, given that the FBI has hauled records out of his home and office as part of a City Hall corruption probe, and the councilman has other legal problems too.

But council districts have as many as two dozen employees and in times of crisis they ought to have more than a few of them in the field, spotting and solving problems, and cracking down on illegal dumpers. Not just with citations, but with handcuffs, perp walks and mandatory trash pickup duty.

The city has thousands of workers on the streets every day writing tickets, fixing potholes, driving trash trucks. Every one of them ought to be reporting issues they see on their rounds.

“If you’re writing a parking ticket and someone dumps a toilet in the street, you should call sanitation,” said Estela Lopez of the Downtown Industrial Business Improvement District, or BID.

The crews that clean the streets of that BID are homeless or formerly so, and they’re employed by the nonprofit Chrysalis, which tries to get them all housed and self-supporting. James Blackwell, for instance, supervises Lopez’s crew and told me he just moved into his own place.

It’s a terrific program — clean the streets and get people off the streets at the same time. Chrysalis staffs 16 BIDs in L.A. and 10 Caltrans crews, and would like to do more. But an expansion proposal has gotten bottled up at City Hall. Stay tuned for more on that in the near future.

Meanwhile, let’s keep the pressure on City Hall.

I drove a little farther south Thursday and found a monumental dumpsite at East 25th Street and Long Beach Avenue along the railroad tracks. I took photos during my survey to share with City Hall, and I’d like you to do the same.

Get your camera or phone and send me photos of eyesores in your neighborhood or near your place of employment. Include the address, and I’ll take a look at as many as I can get to, publicize the filth and count the days until City Hall cleans it up.

If we don’t take charge, who will?

For more information about rat control, contact EHS Pest.

Source la times

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Beginning in about the year 2000, nearly all organophosphate pesticides became unavailable for use in homes. This was do...
05/24/2019

Beginning in about the year 2000, nearly all organophosphate pesticides became unavailable for use in homes. This was done primarily to limit exposure of children to active ingredients that negatively affect their health and development. Despite this extensive cancellation of organophosphates for structural pest management, one holdover active ingredient from that era remains today: dichlorvos (2,2-dichlorovinyl dimethyl phosphate, or DDVP).

The most common use of this product is as a slow-release v***r from impregnated resin plastic blocks. Pest-strips, as they are called, are used to treat a variety of pests including flies, gnats, mosquitoes, moths, silverfish, cockroaches, spiders, beetles, and earwigs. Like all pesticides, the label instructions are the law, and pest-strips have very strict requirements for use. The guidelines for these products are not intended to make the life of pest professionals difficult, but to reduce human exposure to active ingredients that can cause nausea, headaches, twitching, trembling, excessive salivation and tearing, inability to breathe from a paralyzed diagram, convulsions, and if concentrations are exceedingly high — death.

Legal Uses.

In general, products containing dichlorvos are intended for use in confined spaces where people will not be present for more than four hours at a time. Depending on the size of the product (16 or 65 grams), each pest-strip can treat an area of 100 to 1,200 cubic feet for up to four months (1,200 cubic feet is a room that measures 10 by 15 by 8 feet). Some areas where these products can be used include garages, sheds, attics, crawl spaces, storage units, trash bins, and for the small sizes (16 g): pantries, cupboards, and closets. Many other commercial applications are listed on the label.

Illegal Uses.

Pest-strips in restaurants are often illegally placed near drains.

Unfortunately, these products are sometimes used in violation of the label directions to treat pests in spaces where people are present for more than four hours, or where food is present. A common example that makes me cringe is the use of pest-strips in food establishments. Especially cringe-worthy is when numerous strips are used in a kitchen where food is prepared and workers are present for a full day. Yes, I’m talking about your average restaurant. DSCN0618

Do you see the pest-strip? Yes, right next to the Spanish and red onions!

Address the Problem.

It is critical to understand that the use of pest strips for fly control at a drain or cockroach control by a grill line are not treating the problem, only the symptom. The real problem in these scenarios is the presence of food and shelter: accumulated organic debris in drains, food spillage behind and under equipment, and cracks or crevices in structures that provide harborage. If you remove these conditions you treat the problem and eliminate the symptoms.

Remember, for all pesticides and pesticide products, the label is the law. As an applicator, you are responsible and legally obligated to follow the instructions that are intended to reduce health risks for you and your clients.

For more information on pest-strips in structural pest management, contact EHS Pest. Source: cornell.edu

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When summer is in full bloom, expect pest activity to increase as well. Here are five reasons why pests love summer seas...
05/16/2019

When summer is in full bloom, expect pest activity to increase as well. Here are five reasons why pests love summer season like you do.

* Temperature - The rise of temperature has an impact to the behavior and development of many pests such as mosquitoes, ants, termites, spiders and cockroaches. But they also tend to hide and seek shelter when the temperature hits extreme. Just like humans, they have a favorable climate wherein they can actively move and look for food until a critical temperature level hits and compels them to look for a cooler environment.
* Moisture - Most pests thrive in moist areas. This is why summer is a favorable weather condition because of frequent rain showers and increased humidity levels that occur during this season.
* Food Sources - Grass and vegetation is no doubt abundant during summer. With ample food source, pests tend to swarm the spot until grubs run out and they start looking for other source.
* Life Cycle - Many pests are cold-blooded and they tend to increase activity during a certain stages of their life cycle when the climate is warmer.
* Daylight - With more hours of sunlight and shorter nights, this provide more time for many pests to feed.

For more information about pests and their behavior, contact EHS Pest.

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In this video, you will learn how to protect yourself from ticks, specifically:   * how the tick life cycle supports the...
05/01/2019

In this video, you will learn how to protect yourself from ticks, specifically:

* how the tick life cycle supports the Lyme disease transmission cycle
* how to protect yourself against tick bites
* safe tick removal, and
* tick avoidance

For more information about tick control and how to prevent lyme disease, contact EHS PEST.

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Dry Ice is now the latest weapon against rat infestation problem we have across New England. Killing these pesky rodents...
04/26/2019

Dry Ice is now the latest weapon against rat infestation problem we have across New England. Killing these pesky rodents through suffocation of gaseous carbon dioxide shows impressive effectiveness than other traditional extermination method. Apart from that, it is safe to use as it pose no risk to other wildlife.

This rat extermination technique is done by filling rat burrows with dry ice pellets. As dry ice ev***rates it kills the rats inside their nest. The treatment works within minutes but there are instances when some rats escape. Thus, an area must be treated a couple of times. But this treatment still looks more viable than using poison as far as safety is concern.

Also, the idea of trapping and suffocating rats in their own nest underground is a clever move since there's no need of removing dead rat bodies as it decomposes and eventually become part of the soil.

For more information about dry ice for rats, contact EHS Pest.

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Mole control * I do not charge a trap setting fee, a visit fee or a mileage fee  * I offer you competitive rates, withou...
04/17/2019

Mole control

* I do not charge a trap setting fee, a visit fee or a mileage fee
* I offer you competitive rates, without fuss.
* I use traditional methods to catch moles
* I can, and will deal with, moles in all situations and environments.

What NOT to do – Myths about moles explained

Many people believe that moles do not like vibrations and try to scare the moles away by putting windmills, or canes with bottles on them in the ground. As you can see from the first two photographs that I have taken in customer’s gardens, these do not work.

The third picture shows an ‘Electronic Mole Repellent’. I see many of these devices when I visit gardens. When people get a mole in their garden, they search the internet and find companies that sell these objects. They work on the same principle of vibrations in the ground. In actual fact they attract the worms and so attract the moles as you can see from this picture.

Some people become so exasperated with the mole digging up their garden, they try to stab or impale it with garden forks as pictured below. Firstly I would not advise against this as it is illegal to kill a mole in this way and secondly, you will waste a huge amount of time and energy in using this method.

Amongst gardeners, another myth is that moles do not like the plant Euphorbia. As you can see from this garden, there is lots of Euphorbia and moles, which clearly means that it is not true.

I was called to a garden recently who had had their garden landscaped at great expense and had ‘Mole Netting’ installed beneath the grass. This product claims to prevent moles from coming into your garden, but as you can see from the pictures, this also does not work.

For more information about mole control, contact EHS Pest.

Source: ladymolecatcher.co.uk

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Why do we utilize    for burrowing   infestations?  96% Effective Eliminates   Protects   from fatal   Protects   human ...
04/15/2019

Why do we utilize for burrowing infestations?

96% Effective Eliminates Protects from fatal Protects human health pet health Protects health Protects Its and its !

Contact EHS Pest to learn more.

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Smart doorbells, thermostats are becoming increasingly common in our homes and businesses.  This technology is available...
04/11/2019

Smart doorbells, thermostats are becoming increasingly common in our homes and businesses.

This technology is available for rodent monitoring.

EHS has been utilizing this intelligent technology for several years and we are experts in this field. Imagine having 24/7/365 monitoring that alerts us to rodent invasion so we can react immediately and to prevent rodent infestation.

Contact John Stellberger at EHS for additional information.

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Rodentologist Bobby Corrigan finds the rattiest tree in America....right on Boston Common!     For more information abou...
03/29/2019

Rodentologist Bobby Corrigan finds the rattiest tree in America....right on Boston Common!



For more information about rats and how to control rat infestation, contact EHS Pest in MA, RI.

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Controlling German cockroach infestations requires a comprehensive approach, both in the field and out. Here’s how to ge...
03/22/2019

Controlling German cockroach infestations requires a comprehensive approach, both in the field and out. Here’s how to get the job done:

1. Find the hot spots.

An overlooked roach population will prevent you from gaining control and may spread to neighboring businesses or apartment units. To find the source, conduct thorough inspections. That means lifting drain lids, pulling items and appliances away from walls, arming yourself with a screwdriver and a good flashlight, and having a good look around. To see what may be lurking in mixers, espresso machines, cash registers and other equipment, apply a flushing agent and take apart and clean motor housings if necessary, added the 40-year industry veteran.

2. Monitor more.

Effective management is based on a lot of diagnostics. Count how many monitors you’re using and double that number as “the information you gather from that effort is just incredibly valuable”.

Continuous monitoring tells you where introductions are coming in so you can jump on them before a population gets established. Research shows in most cases that “genetic relatedness is extremely high between cockroaches in a single building.” That reinforces the importance of monitoring as one introduction could be the cause for a building-wide infestation.

3. Teach prevention.

Clients aren’t pest experts and don’t understand how their actions may be exacerbating the problem. Educating them on this falls to the PMP and may include how to conduct proper housekeeping and sanitation, that it’s okay to report cockroach problems or throw out infested food items, and how ignoring the problem can have health consequences or cause economic problems for others.

4. Communicate better.

To educate stakeholders and get insights on pest activity (tenants and employees are your best source of intel), open communication is essential. But there are “a lot of communication problems going on,” many stemming from cultural differences and language barriers.

Like the United States, Canada is a diverse country and we’re going to have to get better at (communicating) because there’s different languages coming in all the time.

To bridge this gap, shows pictures to restaurant staff. Hangs a photo of a roach with strips of green painting tape attached and asks employees to place tape where they see the pests. Not only is this “easy to communicate” but “it cuts my time in half to find the roaches” during next service visit.

An easy-to-read report is created that helps mall property managers act more quickly to address cockroach problems at food court restaurants. The system rates pest activity and sanitation and “gives a complete snapshot on two or three pages” compared to wading through a 48-page report.

5. Make sanitation stick.

Getting clients and tenants to engage in proper cleaning, sanitation and maintenance is the biggest hurdle to controlling cockroaches. “It is more of a challenge than the roaches are. If we can get them to clean and maintain and repair, a lot of times we’re going to get really good control with very little chemical,”.

Floor-level sanitation, especially in food service accounts, has worsened as companies have moved from in-house to low-bid contract cleaning services. But “the pest management industry has to take some ownership of allowing this to continue. We really have to do a better job becoming quasi-sanitarians again, holding our customers accountable for those conditions” and getting them to act on the recommendations cited in service reports. Clients and tenants need to understand that when they become part of the solution, they get better control and save money.

6. Move beyond baits.

Baits are a wonderful tool, but they’re only one of the tools in the box. Meanwhile, dusts are so underused it’s insane. Dusts in wall voids and cracks and crevices, such as where pipes enter the walls. Dusts even can be used in combination with baits, giving pest management professionals double the control opportunity.

We urged PMPs to use a vacuum in clean out situations. The difference you can make just physically removing those German cockroaches is amazing and it will push the results of your pest management program forward very significantly. However, doing so requires time so schedule and price jobs accordingly.

Other control options include pest proofing and heat treatments.

7. Stay vigilant.

Persistence wins. PMPs need to “be Sherlock Holmes” as the more investigative you are the more likely you are to find a good hiding spot where the roaches are and that’s the best place to bait.

Don’t be afraid to change your service approach. Doing an overnight service allows you to use different chemicals and approaches that you couldn’t use during the day.

Takes a team approach, involving stakeholders like property managers, restaurant owners and staff, and even the local health inspector if necessary, to meet control goals.

8. Improve training.

Invest in effective training so technicians thoroughly understand integrated pest management for German cockroaches, how to communicate with clients to eliminate conducive conditions, and how to properly apply products and conduct other treatments.

They must understand why German cockroaches do what they do. If you do not have that knowledge or you cannot pass that knowledge along to the guys who are responsible for the ex*****on of the management program, you’re going to fail” because the “devil is in the details” when it comes to understanding why an infestation isn’t getting better.

If you want to control a cockroach you have to think like a cockroach and that requires understanding the biology and behavior of the pest. Eighty per cent of the work is other than putting out bait.

German cockroach
(Blattella germanica)

Length: 16 mm

Color: Brown with two dark longitudinal stripes on the pronotum.

Reproduction: Females produce 40 or more eggs per ootheca (egg case) and reproduce throughout the year. They favor a humid environment with an average temperature of 80+ degrees Fahrenheit.

Behavior: German roaches are active at night, leaving their harborage to find food and water. Otherwise, they remain hidden in dark, secluded areas, including in wall voids and around motor housings in appliances. At most, only one-third of a population will forage at night.

For more information about cockroach control, contact EHS Pest.

Source: pctonline.com

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