APPLY PESTICIDES CORRECTLY
 A GUIDE FOR COMMERCIAL APPLICATORS

Industrial,  Institutional
 Structural and  Health
 Related  Pest Control
               ctf
      U.S. ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
        OFFICE OF PESTICIDE PROGRAMS
         WASHINGTON, D.C. 20460

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                             TABLE  OF  CONTENTS
                                         Page
Acknowledgments  	    1
Preface  	    1
Introduction 	    2
Using Pesticides Safely  	    2
General Insect Pests	
  Cockroaches	
  Ants  	
                      	   2
                      	   2
                      	   3
  Bees and  Wasps  	   4
Parasitic Pests of  Man  	   5
  Bed Bug	   5
  Fleas   	   5
  Ticks   	   5
  Mosquitoes  	   6
Occasional  Invaders  	   6
  Clover Mite 	   6
  Millipedes  	   6
  Flies  	   7
  Silverfish and Firebrats 	   7
  Booklice  	   8
  Spiders	   8
  Fabric Pests 	   8
                                          Page
Wood-Destroying Pests  	    9
   Termites  	    9
  Powder-Post Beetles  	   10
  Long-Horned Beetles	   11
  Wood Decay Fungi 	   11
Stored Product Pests  	   11
  Grain and Flour Beetles 	   11
  Cabinet Beetles  	   12
  Indian Meal  Moth  	   12
  Angoumois Grain Moth 	   12
  Grain Weevils  	   12
Vertebrates  	   12
  Rodents  	   12
  Birds  	   13
  Bats  	   14
  Skunks  	   14
   Squirrels  	   14
  Moles	   14
  Snakes  	   14
Weeds  	   14
                                            1976

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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
PREFACE
This guide has been developed by  Purdue Univer-
sity under U.S.  Environmental  Protection Agency
(EPA) contract  number 68-01-3117.  This  con-
tract  was  issued by the Training  Branch,  Opera-
tions  Division, Office of Pesticide Programs, EPA.
The leader of this  group effort was Gary W.  Ben-
net, Purdue  University.  Editors were  Mary  Ann
Wamsley,  EPA,  and Donna M. Vermeire, North
Carolina State University.

Contributors were:
Joel R. Meltzner, Environmental Protection Agency,
  Washington, D.C.
Harry B.  Moore, North Carolina State  University
Vernon  E.  Walter,  Terminix  International,  Inc.,
  Memphis, Tennessee
Eugene  D.  Young,  California  State  Polytechnic
  University
Federal regulations establish general  and  specific
standards that you must meet before  you can use
certain pesticides. Your State will provide material
which you may study to help you meet the general
standards. This  guide  contains  basic  information
to help you  meet the specific standards for appli-
cators  who are engaged in industrial,  institutional,
structural and health-related pest  control.

Because the  guide was prepared to cover the entire
nation, some information  important to your  State
may not be included. The State agency in charge of
your training can provide  the other materials you
should study.

This guide will give you information about:
• pest control and pesticides,
• using pesticides safely, and
• recognizing and controlling common  pests.

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INTRODUCTION

Proper identification  of pests  and a knowledge  of
pest  development arid behavior are  keys to  effec-
tive  pest  control.  After  you  have  identified  the
pests, you must  decide how to control them. Re-
moval of food, water, and habitat (place  in which
to live) is an important part of effective pest control,
but should be combined with  appropriate chemical
and mechanical control methods. If  you  choose  to
use a pesticide, select a product that has label direc-
tions for the intended use.

The  various formulations can  be  used on a wide
variety of jobs  in  many  different types  of  equip-
ment. But each formulation has its own characteris-
tics which help determine which is the best  to use
in a  given situation. For example:
•  for a space  spray, you might use  an insecticide
   in oil;
•  for long residual  activity in a dry situation, a dust;
•  for a residual spray, either an oil solution or water
   emulsion;
•  for a  surface application of a residual where ap-
   pearance is not too important, a wettable powder
   spray;
•  for use around open flames and heat, an emul-
   sion;
•  for use around electrical installations, an oil solu-
   tion;
•  for spraying on or around plants, a wettable pow-
   der or selected emulsion;
•  for use on or around linoleum, rubber, asphalt
   floor tiles, and some synthetic fibers, a water-base
   insecticide.
USING  PESTICIDES  SAFELY

Do not release pesticides into  soil,  air or  water
except where you  intend to do so as a safe and
approved part of your  work. Pesticides put in the
wrong place,  or on the wrong plant,  or where the
wrong animal can contact or consume  them  are pol-
lutants and may cause  serious harm.

Use  special  care in sensitive areas such  as  food
handling establishments and where children, elderly
people or ill  people are  located.  Pets  and  their
eating places  also must be kept  in mind. Pesticides
used, in or around  such areas should  be the  safest
ones available that are effective. Apply them so that
contamination does not occur.


GENERAL INSECT  PESTS

COCKROACHES
Four species of cockroaches are commonly found
throughout the United States. They vary somewhat
in appearance and habits but in general are all flat,
brownish or dark, and fast-running. Cockroaches
seek cover in  the daytime or when  disturbed  at
night. They may be carried into buildings in boxes
and beverage cases, and with groceries. In apart-
ments  and larger  buildings, they  readily  migrate
from one room to another along water pipes, cracks
in the walls, and wall voids. Some species may enter
structures from outdoors or come in through sewer
lines.

The stages in the  life cycle of a cockroach are:
• the  egg, enclosed in a  capsule  which contains
  several eggs,
• several  stages  of nymphs,  which  look like  the
  adults  but are  smaller and have no wings, and
• the adult.

German Cockroach

• A common species found in kitchens.
• Adults are about \'2 inch long.
• Tan with two dark stripes running  lengthwise on
  the area just behind the  head.
• Often occur in  large numbers.
American Cockroach

• Reddish-brown;  margins  of  prothorax  (behind
  head) lighter.
• Largest of the common cockroaches (adult about
  l'/2  inches long).
• Found in dark,  moist areas such as basements,
  sewers,  and  steam heat tunnels.

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  American Cockroach
Oriental  Cockroach
   About 1 inch long as an adult.
   Shiny black or very dark brown.
   Female has small  wings; wings of the male cover
  about
         74
of his  abdomen.
   Often  found in damp places  such  as  basements.
   May enter buildings through sewer  openings.
   May  live  outdoors  during the summer  months
   and move from building to building.
              Female               Male

Brown-Banded Cockroach

•  About V2  inch long.
•  Brown with two  lighter bands across the base  of
   the wings  and  abdomen.
.•  May  infest an  entire  building.
•  Infestations usually start from luggage, furniture,
   or  other  materials shipped  from  one  place  to
   another.
In some areas of the country, there are other cock-
roach pests. Some of these  are very similar in ap-
pearance to those described above but differ in their
habits. As  a result, proper identification is essential
to control.  Contact local experts for information on
other species that may be important. The removal
of food and water sources and destruction of breed-
ing places is essential in obtaining satisfactory cock-
roach control.

In kitchens and  living areas, apply  insecticides as
crack and crevice or spot treatments to places where
the insects  hide.  Label directions of residuals per-
mit only crack and crevice  treatment to be used in
commercial food  handling  areas. Common "hide-
outs" are behind  and beneath built-in  shelves  and
cabinets, in and  beneath stoves and refrigerators,
under sinks, and  behind baseboards.

In basements,  cockroaches  hide beneath  trash, in
cupboards and  washing machines, and in cracks and
crevices  in  concrete, brick, or block walls.  Sprays
are usually preferred to dusts  because  they  are
easier to apply and  the residue is  not as visible.
Dusts, however, can  sometimes be blown into places
difficult  to  reach  with spray.

Use ULV (ultra  low volume) and  aerosol applica-
tions of contact sprays and flushing agents to  sup-
plement residual sprays and dusts.  Use them alone
where the label prohibits use of residuals.

ANTS
The stages  in the  life cycle of an ant are:
• egg,
• larva,
• pupa,  and
• adult.
During the year,  ant  colonies  produce winged indi-
viduals.  These  are often mistaken for termites.
                                                               Straight
                                                               Antenna
                                                      Front Wings   Both Wings
                                                      Longer     Equal
                                                                  Narrow Waist  Broad Waist

                                                                Basic Differences between Ants and Termites
                                        Carpenter Ants
                                        •  Variable in size, measuring up to Vi inch long.
                                        •  Red to black.
                                        •  Either  winged or wingless.
                                        •  Build nests in hollow trees, logs, telephone poles,
                                           posts,  porch   :llars,  and  other  wood  used in
                                           homes.
                                        •  A  small pile  of coarse  sawdust beneath  wood
                                           with  a  higher than normal moisture  content is
                                           a common sign.

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   Do not eat wood  but  simply hollow it out to
   form nests.
   Can weaken structures.
                    Carpenter Ant
 Other Ants
 • Most build their nests in soil.
 • Those  that  invade buildings  usually  nest  near
   foundation walls,  in  lawns, or  under concrete
   slabs.

 Control both carpenter  ants  and other indoor- or
 outdoor-nesting ants  by  direct  treatment  of  the
 nests.  Locate the entries  of  carpenter ants. Then
 blow an insecticide dust  into the  nesting area. Con-
 trol  other ant spec'v~  with  sprays, dusts, or granular
 insecticides directed  at  the nest and  surrounding
 area. Baits may be used effectively.

 If you cannot locate the nest site, apply insecticides
 where the ants gain  entry or  hide—along  founda-
 tion walls; at doorways, windowsills,  and baseboards;
 behind built-in  cabinets and  furniture; or  beneath
 refrigerators and other heavy  appliances.

 BEES AND WASPS

 Bees and  wasps are nuisances  and may be  danger-
 ous  to man because of the female's  ability to sting.
 These  insects have similar life cycles, including:
 • egg,
 • larva,
 • pupa, and
 • adult.


 Paper Wasps

Paper  wasps include  the single  comb  (Polistes)
wasps, hornets, and  yellow jackets. Single comb
 wasps build open comb nests under eaves of houses,
in shrubs,  and  in other  protected places. Hornets'
nests are large, covered,  grayish-brown paper struc-
tures usually seen hanging in trees or bushes. Yellow
jackets often  build  their  nests  above  as well  as
underground. These wasps vary in color. As a gen-
                                                                                Single Comb Wasp and Nest
eral rule, the hornets are largest (about V/2 inches
long),  the  single comb  wasps are intermediate in
size (about 1 inch) and the yellow jackets are small-
est (about  % inch).
                                    Yellow Jacket
Special  protective  clothing is needed  when  con-
trolling  paper wasps. Insecticide  sprays  work  well,
but they must  be applied  at  night  with a sprayer
large enough to do the job quickly  without getting
too close to the nest. Dusts may  be blown into the
nest openings of hornets and yellow jackets.  Baits
are also available for use against  some  species of
wasps.
Solitary Wasps

Solitary wasps may dig holes in lawns or bare earth
to build their nests. The cicada killer:
•  is a  black  and yellow  wasp  about  \Vz  inches
   long,
•  will not sting or otherwise  cause  harm (only the
   males buzz around people), and
•  can be controlled by directing  dusts  or sprays
   at the entrance to its burrow.
Mud Dauber  Wasps

These wasps:
• are so named because they construct their nests
  of mud in protected places,
• are usually black with yellow  markings,
• are not dangerous since  they do not aggressively
  defend their nests,
• can be eliminated simply  by  tearing down their
  nests.

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 Bees

 Bees such as the honey bee, bumble bee, and car-
 penter bee are pests in and around buildings. Struo-
 tural damage results from their nest-building activi-
 ties.

 Honey bees may build nests in walls, chimneys, and
 attics. Their combs may melt and allow honey  to
 seep through  walls. In addition, the combs may be
 infested  by other insects.

 Bumble  bees build their nests in the ground,  in
 straw or rags, or in buildings.
       Worker        Queen           Drone
             Three Castes of Honey Bees
 Carpenter  bees drill Vz  inch holes  into exposed
 wood. The holes make a  90-degree turn below the
 surface and  run with the grain of the  wood for
 distances up  to 12 inches.

 Bumble bees and carpenter  bees look very much
 alike.  Bumble  bees, however, have yellow hair on
 the top of the abdomen.

 Control bees by directing insecticides at the nest.
 It is wise to  wear clothing to protect against stings
 when treating nests of honey  bees and bumble bees.


PARASITIC  PESTS  OF   MAN

 Many insects, such as bed  bugs, fleas, ticks and mos-
 quitoes, feed directly upon man and  other  warm-
 blooded animals. In addition  to their bloodsucking
 activities,  many are  able to  carry disease-causing
 organisms from one animal to another or to  man.


 BED  BUGS

 • Prefer man as their host.
 • Hide in cracks and crevices and come out to feed
   in the dark, usually as the  host sleeps.
 • Adults  are about  1A inch long, reddish-brown,
   with oval,  flat bodies.
                                Bedbug
The stages in the life cycle of a bedbug are:
• the egg, glued inside cracks and crevices,
• nymphs, and
• the adult.

Either sprays or dusts can be used for control. Dusts
are preferred behind baseboards, window and door
casings, and  in  other cracks and crevices. Do not
treat surfaces that will come in direct  contact with
humans. Treat tufts and  seams of mattresses and
cover them with sheets  after the spray has dried.


FLEAS

Fleas are  small insects without  wings.
The stages in the life cycle of a flea are:
•  the egg,
•  larva,
•  the pupa, and
•  the adult.

Flea infestations in homes are usually noticed after
a host animal (usually a cat or dog) has been re-
moved.  Adult  fleas that  develop  from eggs laid
earlier begin to bite people in the absence of normal
hosts. Eggs may hatch over several months.

Control fleas  in  structures  by  using  surface and
crack and crevice sprays. Control them on animals
by  using dips,  sprays, flea  collars,  or  dusts. The
pest control specialist can treat the premises; how-
ever, the pet should be treated by the owner or by
a veterinarian.

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TICKS
A number of ticks are parasites of man  and other
animals.
                                 Hard Tick
The stages in the life cycle of a tick are:
• egg,
• six-legged larva,
• nymph  (or nymphs), and
• adult.

The brown dog tick:
• is a common  household pest,
• may be found on  other  animals,  although  the
  main host is  the dog,
• will drop off  the host after feeding and conceal
  itself in any available crack or crevice  such  as
  behind  cove moldings and  window  frames and
  in furniture.

This tick  is difficult to control because of  its  many
potential  hiding places.  Eggs may  hatch over a
period of  up to  5 months. Hiding places may need
to  be  sprayed  at  monthly  intervals to  eliminate
this tick. The  owner or a veterinarian should treat
dogs, using  dips, sprays, or  dusts.


MOSQUITOES

• May occur in  large numbers in the warm-weather
  months.
• Adult  females feed on  warm-blooded   animals
  and birds.
• May develop in standing water.
The stages in the life cycle of a mosquito are:
• the egg, which may be laid on water or in areas
  which  later will  be  flooded, depending  on the
  species,
• larva, found only in water,
• the pupa, also found only in water, and
« the adult.

Effective control requires community-wide efforts.
Elimination of  all mosquito breeding habitat is
essential. Control mosquitoes in smaller areas for a
limited  time by using sprays, aerosols,  or fogs.
OCCASIONAL  INVADERS

The term "occasional invaders" includes those pests
which may occur in buildings at some stage of  their
life cycle, but which do not usually complete the
entire life cycle  within  the building.

CLOVER MITE
•  Is an annoying household pest, especially in hous-
   ing  developments where turfgrasses are newly
   established and there is a heavy growth close to
   foundation walls.
Stages  in the life cycle of a clover  mite are:
• the  egg—laid in foundation  cracks  and  other
  protected  places,
• larva,
• nymph, and
• adult.

Clover mites are difficult to control. Methods that
keep the mites from getting indoors give the best
results. These methods include:
• establishing a plant-free strip 18 to 24 inches wide
  along  foundation  walls  and -directing  pesticide
  sprays at  the strip and walls, or
• if a  plant-free strip cannot be  established, spray-
  ing the foundation walls and the adjacent 10-foot
  strip of grass.

MILLIPEDES
• Are  gray  or brown cylindrical worms VT. to ll/2
  inches  long.

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•  Have two pairs of short legs on each body seg-
   ment.
•  Curl up when disturbed.
•  Are common on the forest floor, in compost piles,
   and in  heavily mulched areas.
                               Millipede
The stages in the life cycle of a millipede are:
• egg,
• nymph, and
• adult.

When  millipedes leave  their natural  habitats, they
crawl  over  lawns and  sidewalks  and may invade
buildings in large numbers. They cause no damage.

Prevent invasion by removing leaves and  compost
around buildings and by sealing  cracks in founda-
tion walls  and  around  doors,  basement  windows,
crawl spaces, and vents.

Spraying a 10-foot wide strip around the foundation
is helpful in control. Repeat  applications  may  be
necessary during periods of heavy migration.

FLIES

Several species of flies may be found in and around
structures.

The stages in the life cycle of a  fly are:
• the  egg, deposited in a  moist  place,
• larva,
• pupa,  and
• adult.

Filth Flies

The more common of these  are  the  house fly and
the black blow  fly. The black blow fly is slightly
larger  than  the  house  fly and is a  shiny  black or
green.  These flies are annoying and  also  may  carry
diseases of man.
                        Black Blow Fly
                  House Fly
Successful  fly control  must include a combination
of sanitation, physical barriers (such as  screens),
and  insecticides. Garbage,  manure,  and  decaying
plant and animal material must be removed. Con-
trol  adults by spraying resting places.  Baits can
also  be used.  Impregnated resin strips can be used
in some indoor  situations.

Control  of adult  filth  flies  around  livestock and
poultry feeding  operations requires  the  coopera-
tion  of  the  pest  control  specialist,  the  livestock
producer, and the  county  sanitarian.

Cluster Fly

•  Often a pest indoors, buzzing around and collect-
  ing in large numbers in light fixtures and at win-
   dows on warm, sunny days.
•  Slightly larger than the house fly and  more slug-
   gish.
•  Adults seek protected places such  as  wall voids
   and attics to spend the  winter.
•  Screens  are ineffective  since the flies prefer  to
   crawl in through small  openings elsewhere.
•  On warm days, they enter rooms through window
   pulley  holes,  around  baseboards   and through
   other small openings.

Control is difficult.  If possible, close all  openings
through which the flies can enter. Apply  sprays and
dusts to surfaces  where  flies  are  frequently seen
and, where possible, into wall voids and  other con-
fined spaces where the flies may be. In unventilated
areas,  impregnated  resin strips are  effective.

SILVERFISH  AND FIREBRATS

Silverfish  and firebrats are wingless  insects  about
Vi inch long as  adults.  They have three  long "bris-
tletails" at the end of their body.
                                                                        Silverfish
The stages in the life cycle of silverfish and  fire-
brats  are:
• the egg,
• young,  and
• adult, which continues to molt throughout its life
  span.

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They feed on stored foods, paper, and almost any-
thing containing proteins or carbohydrates. Directed
sprays applied to cracks and crevices that serve as
hiding and resting places are most frequently used
for control;  dusts and baits may also be used.


BOOKLICE
Booklice (psocids) are very small (V-jo to Vio inch),
light-colored insects that may be found indoors and
out.  Indoors  they  frequent  damp  places  around
stored  foods and books and in crawl spaces.  They
feed on molds and fungi. They do little damage and
are pests  by  being  present,  often in tremendous
numbers.
The stages in the life cycle of booklice are:
• egg,
• nymph, and
• adult.

They can be serious pests for manufacturers of food
products  and  containers.  Control booklice  by  re-
moving moisture and  food  sources. Directed sprays
and aerosols are effective in control.
SPIDERS

Spiders  are pests because of  their webs.  The black
widow and the brown recluse (fiddleback) can seri-
ously injure  humans.  Neither spider bites  unless
provoked.


A spider  develops from an  egg  into an  immature
spider which  may molt several times before becom-
ing an adult.
                              Black Widow Spider
The brown recluse spider is tan to brown with a
dark brown fiddle-shaped pattern on the front half
of its back. It is usually  found  in buildings such as
barns,  sheds,  garages,  and  houses that  are  dry,
littered, undisturbed and contain insects that serve
as food. Favorite hiding places  seem to be  the arms
or legs of garments left hanging undisturbed. People
are sometimes bitten while sleeping in  beds or
wearing clothes that have been unused for a length
of time.
                      \
                                                       Brown Recluse Spider
                                                                                             V
Control  spiders by controlling insects  that  serve
as food, and  by removing webs. Direct  pesticide
sprays or dusts at hiding areas.


FABRIC PESTS

Carpet  beetles  and clothes  moths attack a variety
of woolen products, furs, feathers,  and hair. Infesta-
tions  are common  in boxes of old  clothing,  over-
stuffed  furniture, woolen carpets,  and  piano felt.
The larval stage causes the damage. The  presence
of adults in an area may be  the first  sign of an
infestation.

The stages in the life cycle of beetles  and moths
are:
•  egg,
•  larva,
•  pupa, and
•  adult.
The female black widow is shiny black and  dis-
tinctively marked with a red or yellow spot on  the
underside of the body, sometimes in  the  form of
an  "hourglass".  This  spider lives  under  rocks  and
boards  and in or around buildings.
Black Carpet Beetle

• These are the most widespread and damaging of
  the carpet beetles.
• Adults are shiny black and about Vs inch long.

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   Larvae are up to Vi  inch long, yellowish-brown,
   carrot or cigar-shaped, and  have a long  brush
   of tail bristles.
     Black Carpet Beetle
Other  Carpet  Beetles
•  Adults are oval, about Vs inch long, and brightly
   colored in various patterns of white, brown, yel-
   low, and orange.
•  Larvae  are about V4 inch long,  light brown  to
   black, fuzzy, and slow-moving.
Webbing Clothes  Moth and
Casemaking Clothes Moth
The webbing clothes moth adult is buff-colored with
reddish hairs on the top of its head. The casemaking
clothes  moth  is light brown  and has three  dark
spots on each wing. The larva of the webbing clothes
moth  usually  spins feeding tunnels  of silk  as it
moves over its food sources. The casemaking clothes
moth larva carries with  it a small silken case that
it spins  around itself. To this case are attached bits
of the  fiber on which  the larva is  feeding. It at-
taches the case to walls  or ceilings  when  it enters
the pupal stage.

Prevention is  a very important part  of fabric pest
control. This  can  be  done  by cleaning fabrics
correctly and  storing them in  tight containers  with
moth crystals. Control infestations by treating all
infested areas  with  directed  sprays.

WOOD-DESTROYING
PESTS

TERMITES
The stages in the life cycle of a termite are:
• egg,
• nymph, and
• adult.

Termites are social insects having colonies in which
there  is a division of labor between different types
of individuals. Nearly all species have reproductive
and soldier castes, and many have a worker caste.
If a worker caste is lacking, the nymphs handle the
nest  building and food gathering  activities. These
workers are responsible for damage done to wooden
structures. Within the  reproductive caste are pri-
mary  reproductives which are winged.  They emerge
from  the colony during the warmer months of the
year to disperse and form new colonies.

Subterranean Termites

• So  named because  the colony  extends below
  ground with the workers attacking wood above
  ground.
• White, soft-bodied workers eat the  soft grain of
  wood, leaving a thin  shell outside and the harder
  portion in layers.
• They use bits of soil and excrement to build shelter
  tubes and to close up breaks in the surface of
  infested wood.
• If  "swarmer"   (reproductive) termites  have  not
  been seen, the presence  of a colony can be de-
  termined by probing wood  near the  foundation
  or  soil or  by   observing earthen  "shelter tubes"
  on  foundation walls  or wood.
          Worker
                                  Soldier
     Reproductive
This termite must  have  wood for food and usually
needs soil for  moisture.  Wood in contact  with  soil
is ideal  for termite development. However, termites
may build shelter tubes across foundation walls  and
other surfaces  between the wood and the soil. Ter-
mites occasionally become established  without  soil
contact  when  a  leaky roof or pipe provides  mois-
ture.  Infestations  may  become  established  under

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concrete slabs, garage floors, patios,  and filled  dirt
porches.  Termites  may  then  enter  the building
through  structural wood  or foundation  walls  ad-
jacent to the slab. In houses built partly or com-
pletely  on slabs,  termites enter through  expansion
joints, cracks,  and utility openings.
                       - An Sooce FwmeO Dy
                       ' cnnnKaae Ol Dirl Full
                                     Common Type of
                                     Construction
                                     which Involves
                                     a Dirt-Filled
                                     Concrete Porch
                                     Attached to a
                                     Frame House
Breaking the  connection between wood  and soil is
essential in termite control. This may be done with
either  a chemical or mechanical barrier.

Soil on both  sides  of exposed foundation  walls
and soil  surrounding  supporting  piers  should  be
drenched down to the footing with insecticide. Apply
the insecticide by trenching  and  backfilling  or  a
combination of trenching and rodding.

For outside basement  walls  (where the footing is
deep), dig  a  V-shaped  trench  against the  wall. It
should be  deep enough to insure penetration to the
footing.  After trenching,  use  a perforated hollow
rod to inject insecticide to the  footing of the  base-
ment wall.  When treating  concrete block  or  brick
foundation  walls, drill  them  above  the  grade line
and flood all  voids with insecticide.

To- treat  slab-constructed  buildings,  saturate  the
soil beneath the  slab.
                Slab-Floor Construction

Inject  insecticide either  through  holes  drilled  in
the slab  or  by  drilling  and  rodding horizontally
under the slab. Either method must be done carefully
to avoid heat ducts, pipes and vapor barriers located
under the slab.

Treat filled  porches by:
• drilling the slab from the top,
• drilling the porch foundation horizontally at each
   end next to the building and injecting the chemi-
   cal by rodding, or
• making openings in the foundation wall, excavat-
   ing the porch fill immediately under the slab, and
   drenching the soil with insecticide.

Dry-Wood  Termites

• Directly  attack wood  and  make galleries  in it,
   rather than below ground.
• As they feed,  they  cut  across  the  ligneous grain
   of  wood, excavating large  galleries  which  are
   connected by small tunnels.
• They produce hard fecal  pellets  with  six distinct
   concave surfaces on the sides. These pellets are
   often pushed out of  the  infested  wood  through
   small holes.
         Drywood Termite
         Fecal Pellets
Control dry-wood termites  by fumigating the entire
structure with a toxic gas, using a gas-tight tarpaulin.
Control small, localized infestations by  injecting  in-
secticides through holes drilled into the termite gal-
leries. Furniture and other  movable objects may  be
fumigated in  special chambers.


POWDER-POST BEETLES

There  are  several  kinds   of  powder-post  beetles.
The most common  are Lyctid powder-post  beetles
and Anobiid  powder-post  beetles.  The adults  are
small (about % inch long) and usually reddish-brown
to nearly black.

  Lyctid Powder-Post Beetle
                            Anobiid Powder-Post Beetle
Small  "shot hole"  exit  openings  in  the  wooden
surfaces  are  a  sign  of  infestation. Slight jarring of
the wood causes a  fine powder to sift from these
holes. When the wood is cut or broken, the interior
reveals galleries filled with a finely-packed powder
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 which  is  produced  by the  feeding  of grub-like
 larvae. Joists, subflooring,  hardwood flooring, sills,
 plates,  and interior trim are the parts of buildings
 most frequently attacked. Furniture and other wood
 products also may be damaged.

 To  prevent infestations  or to control  existing  in-
 festations,  wet all surfaces thoroughly with  insecti-
 cide. Furniture  and other  movable objects may be
 fumigated  in special chambers.

 LONG-HORNED BEETLES

 Long-horned beetles are  large (Vi to 3 inches long)
 and brightly colored. They  have long, thin antennae
 which may be longer than the body. Eggs are  usually
 laid on unseasoned, rough-sawed  timbers or  logs.
 The  larvae,  called round-headed borers,  feed  in
 the wood. They bore large, oval holes as they move
 through wood.

 The only species that requires control in structures
 is the old-house borer. The adult is about %  inch
 long, grayish-brown  to  black,  and has two white
 patches on the wing covers.  Its galleries have dis-
 tinctive ripples  on  the  interior surface. The  old-
 house borer usually damages  only pine sapwood.
 surface of wood should not be confused with decay.
 The moisture content of the wood may be measured
 with  a moisture meter  to  accurately determine  the
 need for  control.
                  Old House Borer

For control, infested wood must be treated repeat-
edly with a liquid insecticide. Heavy timbers may be
drilled to allow penetration into infested areas. Fumi-
gation under a tarpaulin may sometimes be required.

WOOD  DECAY FUNGI

Severe wood decay  occurs  only  in wood with  a
moisture content greater than 20 percent.  Most
wood-rotting  fungi  grow  only  on wood  which is
subject  to  wetting by rain, roof  leaks, plumbing
leaks, condensation, or contact with moist soil. Two
species,  however,  can conduct  water  directly  to
wood. Fungi take their food from  the  wood as they
grow and reduce the strength of wood,  often making
it brown and crumbly or white and  stringy. Dis-
coloration  and  powdery  mold growth  below  the
                   Wood Decay

 Fungicides will not stop  wood decay once it has
 started,  though they  sometimes slow  its progress.
 The key to complete control  of wood decay is to
 eliminate the source of moisture. This  may be done
 through:
 • proper drainage,
 • breaking contact between wood  and soil,
 • ventilation,
 • the use of vapor barriers, and
 • other good construction practices.

 Lumber, pressure-treated  with preservative chemi-
 cals before  use,  may  prevent attack  by  wood-
 destroying fungi.


 STORED PRODUCT  PESTS

 Most food products  may  be  attacked by  insects
 commonly referred to  as "pantry pests". They eat or
 contaminate the products and may make them unfit
 for human  consumption. They often  leave  the in-
 fested products  and move about inside structures.
 To eliminate  infestations,  find and destroy infested
 materials and treat  the area where they are stored.
 Infested  materials  can be fumigated.  Thorough
 cleaning  is  essential to remove spilled  food  to pre-
 vent reinfestation.


GRAIN AND FLOUR BEETLES

The confused and red flour beetles, the saw-toothed
grain beetle, and the cigarette and drugstore beetles
are small, reddish-brown  insects usually less than
 Vs inch long. Their larvae are small and yellowish-
white with  brown   heads.  The adults  often crawl
over infested material  and  adjacent surfaces.  Larvae
and adults will  be found in the infested material.
                                                11

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                          Saw-Toothed Grain Beetle
          Cigarette Beetle
                      Drugstore Beetle
CABINET BEETLES

Adults have various colored patches of scales on the
back and are  VB  inch  long. The larvae are fuzzy,
light brown to black, and about '/4  inch long. The
larval stages do  most  of the damage.  Adults feed
mainly on  flower  pollen outdoors but may  feed on
stored  food products.

INDIAN MEAL  MOTH

The Indian meal moth  is a small moth with a wing-
spread of about Vz  inch. Its forewings  have a cop-
pery color  on the outer two-thirds and  whitish gray
near the body. The pinkish-white caterpillars cover
the materials on which they feed with loose webbing.
The adults fly  about near the site of the infestation.
The larvae may also leave their food and crawl over
adjacent surfaces. This  is the most common moth
which  attacks  stored food products.
ANGOUMOIS  GRAIN  MOTH

The  Angoumois grain moth is a tiny moth similar
in size and color to clothes moths. It may be seen
flying about in  the daytime, whereas clothes moths
avoid light. The caterpillars  develop within whole
kernels of grain.
GRAIN WEEVILS

The granary  and  rice  weevils  primarily  attack
stored  whole  grain.  Adults are  reddish-brown  to
black,  about Ys  inch long, and  have pronounced
snouts. Their larvae  are small,  white, legless grubs
that feed  and develop inside individual kernels  of
grain.
The stages in the life cycle of a weevil are:

• larva,
• pupa,  and
• adult.
VERTEBRATES


RODENTS

• Contaminate and destroy food products.
• Damage furniture, clothing,  structures, and other
  nonedible items.
• Carry  diseases and  ectoparasites.
• Sometimes bite children and adults.
• Can cause fires.
• Have  the ability  to coexist with man.

The three most common kinds are:
• Norway, brown,  or common rat,
• roof or black rat, and
• house  mouse.

        Field Identification of Domestic Rodents
          ROOF RAT   Ralln rallui           Y°UNG RAT
                Angoumois Gram Moth
                                                          NORWAY RAT  Rallui mnegicut
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The Norway  rat  prefers  to live  in underground
burrows, but can  climb  readily.  The  roof  rat pre-
fers to  live in  upper portions  of a  building,  but
may use burrows.  The  house mouse lives  in  any
convenient protected  space inside or outside.

A rat or mouse  control program  is based on know-
ing:
•  where they live, feed, and travel, and
•  the extent of the infestation.

You must  eliminate  shelter, food, and  water.  All
entrances the rats  or mice  use to  come and  go from
buildings must be closed. These preventive measures
are the  key to successful control.  To prevent rodent
migration,  it-is best to poison or trap before making
environmental changes.

The two categories of rodenticides are multiple-dose
anticoagulants and single-dose toxicants. Each ro-
denticide has special  characteristics, uses, and haz-
ards. Some are  highly toxic  to  humans and pets.
Mix, handle,  and  apply  them according to label
directions.  Keep baits  away from people and desir-
able animals. Place them deep into burrows or use
bait stations.  Dispose of  excess  baits  and dead
animal  carcasses frequently.

Mice will eagerly  sample new food. Rats, however,
usually  approach new food with caution. If it tastes
bad or  makes them sick,  they will  not eat it again.
This is  "bait shyness". When using bait  for control,
use a bait that is fresh and identical to the food the
rats are using. If you use a different bait base, pre-
bait in the  area for a few nights before using a toxic
bait.  Rats  require water to drink. Mice may  get
water from the  food  they eat. If all water sources
can be eliminated, liquid baits are very effective for
rats but only moderately so for  mice.

Both rats and mice prefer  to run  next  to walls or
other surfaces.  Place  traps and baits  in these run-
ways. Traps may  be  used with bait, or the trigger
device may be  expanded  and  used  without  bait.
Place trigger  end of the  trap  toward the wall.
Rats approach  new objects cautiously and  may be
"trap shy".

The mouse investigates any new object or  change
in its territory, so that changing  placement  of baits
or  traps will  improve control.  Each  male house
mouse establishes  a territory which may not extend
more than 10  feet from the nest.  For this  reason,
baits  and traps should be  placed no more than 10
to  20  feet  apart.  To  encourage  mice  to range
farther to find food and water, disrupt their environ-
ment as often as is  practical.

BIRDS

Birds are pests when they:
•  deface and destroy  structures, plants,  and other
   property,
•  cause disturbances with their noise and droppings,
•  contaminate food supplies,
•  carry  various diseases and ectoparasites.

Birds that may require control are  pigeons,  English
sparrows and starlings.

Pigeons  are  pests in towns  and cities where  they
deface buildings  with their droppings and nests.
Sparrows  are  small  birds that often nest in or on
buildings.
         Female
                                Male
                    Sparrows
Starlings are pests in the city and rural areas.  They
are dark,  short-tailed  birds, intermediate  in  size
between pigeons and sparrows. They are objection-
able when  they roost in large numbers near human
dwellings.
Sanitation is the first step in control. Remove  food,
water, and habitat. Control methods include building
out,  removing food, and using repellents, traps, or
avicides.
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Building out involves using new construction features
or modifying existing features so that birds cannot
rodst or nest.  Repellents include various devices or
substances installed on buildings,  such  as  noise
makers (distress calls), charged wires, and repellent
glues or jellies. Traps are often used successfully in
pigeon control, especially when prebaited for a few
•days. Population reduction includes shooting (where
permissible) and the use of avicides. Chemical con-
trol  is probably the most effective method.  Follow
label directions closely.


BATS

Bats are night flying mammals. They have leathery
membranous  wings. They roost  in  attics,  hollow
walls,  chimneys, caves,  barns,  hollow  trees  and
other  similar  places.  In addition to the  general
nuisance and odors associated with bat infestations,
they  harbor  ectoparasites that  may attack  man.
They carry and are subject to rabies. Bats can best
be controlled by closing all openings through which
they may enter structures to roost.  Carefully ob-
serve bats leaving roosting areas. Locate and close
entrance openings.
                            Little Brown Bat
SKUNKS

Skunks  create nauseating  odors,  damage lawns,
harbor ectoparasites, and are subject to rabies.  They
may enter buildings. Entrances  should  be closed
when the  skunk is  outside or it  may be  baited to
trap outside the building for removal  to  a remote
site.
SQUIRRELS

Squirrels of various species may enter buildings and
be a nuisance or do damage to the structure. They
may bite  when cornered.  They carry ectoparasites.
Squirrels can be controlled by  closing openings, by
using repellents or by  using live traps  to  remove
them to remote areas. Where it is permitted, squir-
rels may be shot.
MOLES

Moles  burrow underground  and rarely come above
ground. Their burrows deface lawns and they  may
damage the roots of ornamental plants as they search
for earthworms and insects. Traps  specifically de-
signed  for mole control  may be useful  in  some
situations.
SNAKES
Snakes may find their way into and around buildings.
Most of  them are not poisonous but may frighten
humans and may bite when disturbed. Removal  of
food and hiding places will usually force  snakes out
of an  area. Keep  snakes  from  getting inside  by
closing all  points of entry.


WEEDS

Weeds around structures may need control  because:
• they create a fire hazard,
• they harbor insects or rodents, and
• they shorten the life of metal fences and buildings.

Weed control can be done by:
• Non-selective vegetation  control (bare ground)—
  residual,  broad-spectrum herbicides used to kill
  all plant  growth  and  prevent new growth for a
                                                 14

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   season or more.  Used where reduction of fire
   hazard is important.
•  Short-term   vegetation  control—herbicides  are
   used at rates that  give a good knockdown  of
   existing vegetation and retard  the regrowth.  Used
   where bare ground is not necessary.
•  Selective weeding—control of  certain plants  with-
   out  permanent injury to desirable plants.
•  Chemical trimming  and pruning—use  of contact
   herbicides  to give  narrow bands of  controlled
  .weeds around desirable plants  or buildings. Often
   used to give mowing strip around trees or under
   guard rails.
•  Mechanical  or  cultural  control—use  of  hoes,
   blades,  fertilization,   landscaping,  competitive
   planting, or  other nonchemical methods to  con-
   trol  unwanted vegetation.


Herbicides can be  applied as preemergence or  post-
emergence treatments.  A herbicide can  affect plants
by:
•  killing the plant or plant parts that it contacts,
•  killing when the herbicide is absorbed  by foliage
   and  transported throughout the plant, or
•  killing when  roots absorb  the  herbicide dissolved
   in soil  moisture and  translocated  throughout the
   plant (may last  a season or more in the soil but
   requires rain, irrigation, or mechanical  incorpora-
   tion—discing—for activation in the soil).

Factors affecting herbicide performance:
•  Type of weed—all herbicides are selective to  some
   extent and will  fail  to kill  some types of plants.
   Some herbicides will work better on grasses and
   some  will  work  better  on   broadleaf  plants.
   Perennial weeds can  often grow back  from  their
   extensive  root systems  and will require multiple
   treatments or special techniques  and  herbicides.
   Brush control may be  particularly  difficult but
   can  be  done  in the following ways:
     Foliage absorbed—usually applied in the  sum-
     mer.
     Basal stem—applied to  soil around stems or
     clumps in late winter or early summer.
     Stump treatment—application of herbicides to
     freshly cut stump.
     Dormant cane treatment—applications of fuel
     oil during winter.
•  Type of soil—sand or other  soil low in clay and
   organic  matter will not absorb the herbicide  as
   much,  so  lower  amounts will  give  equivalent
   results.  Leaching  will be  more of  a  problem.
   Soils high in clay or  organic matter will absorb
   some of the herbicide. More herbicide and more
   rainfall is  usually necessary  for effective control.
•  Rainfall—too  much  rain soon  after a contact
   herbicide  is applied can nullify its effectiveness
   but  the same amount  of  rain might facilitate  the
   action of a root-absorbed herbicide. Rainfall may
   also wash  herbicides away from the target plants,
   injuring  nontarget plants and animals.
•  Growth  stage  of  plant—foliage-absorbed  herbi-
   cides will  usually work only when the plant is
   actively  growing. Preemergence  herbicides must
   be applied before the  weeds  have  emerged or  a
   contact herbicide will have  to  be  added to kill
   those that have  emerged.  Where selective herbi-
   cides are used, it is important that  the nontarget
   plants be healthy.
•  Sunlight—some herbicides can be nullified if they
   remain on the  soil surface too long before a rain
   washes them in.

Choose equipment  for the type of herbicide  treat-
ment desired.

The pump will usually be a high  volume  (10 gpm
or more) but low pressure (50-100 Ibs psi). Nozzles
will  usually  be selected   to give uniform  coverage
with large  droplets to minimize  drift.  Mechanical
agitation in the tank is required if  wettable powders
will be used.
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