3. TREAT
Start the cure.
Treatment techniques are the actions taken
to solve pest problems. They are options
that focus on how the prescription will be
implemented. Learning each technique will
arm technicians with important knowledge
necessary to make informed decisions.
CRACK & CREVICE TREATMENT
Definition: The application of small amounts
of insecticide into cracks and crevices in which
insects hide or through which they may enterthe building. Such openings commonly occur at
expansion joints, between different elements of
construction and between equipment and floors.
These openings may lead to voids such as hollow
walls, equipment legs and bases, conduits,
motor housing, junction or switch boxes."
Concept: The goal of Crack & Crevice treatment
is to deliver the insecticide to a specific
location where it is likely to impact the pest
with little or no impact on the area surrounding
the treatment site. The effect may be repellency
(exclusion from the site) or may be used
during inspection to flush insects (identifying
infested areas). It may be used in sensitive
areas where limiting pesticide exposure is an
important consideration.
Examples: Gaps between structural members,
behind moldings, between pieces of equipment, etc.
Advantages: Little or no exposure to pesticide
outside the crack; cost-effective use of materials;
targeted treatment by delivering pesticide to
the pest.
Application equipment: System III;
aerosol container with Crack & Crevice tip;
bait applicator with Crack & Crevice tip.
Common pests treated with this technique: Cockroaches, silverfish, bedbugs, spiders,
centipedes and many other crawling insects.
Products used: Contact Insecticides, Residual
Insecticides and Baits. |
VOID TREATMENT
Definition: Application to enclosed spaces
where insects may live, hide or travel.
Concept: Void treatments flush insects from
their harborage for inspection to identify infested
sites; repel insects from living or traveling
through void areas within a structure by making
the void uninhabitable or impassable (exclusion);
or kill insects present within the void
space. Examples of voids include hollow walls,
hollow doors, spaces within equipment housings,
false flooring and suspended ceilings. Some
cracks and crevices lead to voids, while others
have open access points. Still others may need
to have access created by drilling holes into
walls, ceilings or veneers.
Advantages: Treatment is focused on specific
areas with little or no pesticide exposure to
adjacent areas. Some formulations of residual
insecticides, such as dusts, tend to have
extended life in the dark, dry conditions of
a void.
Application equipment: Aerosol containers
with a four-way void injector tip; bellows or
bulb duster.
Common pests treated with this technique: Void nesting ants, cockroaches, overwintering
insect pests, void nesting bees and wasps.
Products used: Contact Insecticides, Residual
Insecticides (especially Dusts) and Baits. |
VOID TREATMENT
Definition: Surface application to limited areas
where insects are likely to be present, not
exceeding two square feet in area.
Concept: The goal is to control insects by
exposing them to insecticide as they come in
contact with treated surfaces. This technique is
often used to prevent pest entry from outdoors.
Technicians may make individual spot applications
or a series of closely spaced spot treatments. This
method is typically used for general maintenance
of crawling insects in insect prone areas.
Applications are usually made along baseboards,
foundations or on framing members where other
application techniques are not practical.
Advantages: Technicians can treat many areas
in a short period of time.
Application equipment: Compressed air
sprayers, some aerosol containers.
Common pests treated with this technique: Spiders, crickets, scorpions, millipedes,
centipedes, pillbugs and other crawling
occasional invaders.
Products used: Contact Insecticides, Residual
Insecticides. |
ULV-SPACE TREATMENT
Definition: Treatment to a volume of space
with relatively small amounts of non-residual
insecticide with droplets having a mass median
diameter of 20 microns or less to control the
exposed stages of flying and crawling insects.
Concept: The goal of ULV space treatment is
to kill or control exposed stages of flying insects
or crawling insects by exposing them to small
droplets of insecticide delivered and dispersed
into the air. The insecticide contacts insects as
the small droplets travel through the air or fall
from suspension in the air.
Advantages: Technicians can treat large areas
in a short time and quickly kill exposed insects.
It’s an excellent technique for controlling flying
insects and exposed crawling insects in complex
environments.
Application equipment: Aerosol containers
with fogging actuators or ULV generating devices.
Common pests treated with this technique: Flies, mosquitoes, stored product moths and
stored product beetles.
Products used: Contact Insecticides. |
DIRECTED CONTACT TREATMENT
Definition: Application of an aerosol to
exposed insects for immediate kill.
Concept: Some situations require quick kill to
prevent insects such as wasps and hornets
from stinging people. Other situations involve
insects found in complex environments (eg.
inside machinery or piles of debris) that limit
the usefulness of other techniques. In these
cases, directed contact applications can quickly
kill exposed insects within a localized area and
prevent insect movement to other areas.
Advantages: Quick kill of exposed pests in
localized areas. Excellent technique for treating
stinging insect nests, roaches in debris beneath
kitchen equipment and fleas in carpeting.
Application equipment: Specialized aerosol
products such as Wasp-Freeze for wasp and
hornets nests, Ultracide for fleas or other contact
insecticides delivered in aerosol containers,
Micro-Injectors or compressed air sprayers.
Common pests treated with this technique: Cockroaches in debris beneath equipment,
crickets and other insects that “scatter,” wasps,
hornets or other insects that pose a physical
threat to residents or applicator.
Products used: Contact Insecticides. |
PERIMETER TREATMENT
Definition: General broadcast application to
exterior areas of structures.
Concept: The goal of perimeter treatment is to
reduce pest pressures by impacting two types
of areas: reservoir sites and interception zones.
Reservoir sites provide resources that allow
pest populations to build near the structure.
These areas include mulch beds, plantings,
decks and garbage areas. Interception zones
are harborages or access points for pests on the
structure. These zones may include foundations,
soffits, weep holes, windows, doorways, soil
near foundations and access points to the
structure. Adequate pesticide coverage in
targeted areas and proper penetration to the
substrates where pests live, feed and travel,
may be an important consideration for
successful perimeter treatment.
Advantages: By performing general applications
on the exterior perimeter of a structure, the
applicator can control both resource sites and
interception zones, limiting pest pressure on
the structure.
Application equipment: Compressed air
sprayer, backpack sprayer, power spray rigs and
granular insecticide spreader.
Common pests treated with this technique: Ants, cockroaches, crickets, spiders, millipedes,
centipedes and other occasional invaders.
Products used: Residual Insecticides and Baits. |
EXCLUSION
Definition: Protecting an area against pest
access either by mechanical alteration (physical
exclusion) or by rendering access points and
harborage impassable via chemical repellency
(chemical exclusion).
Concept: Exclusion involves altering the
environment so pests can not enter or travel.
Chemical exclusion repels pests from the area
and reduces the likelihood that pests will enter
or harbor. Accomplished by making Crack &
Crevice or void injection treatments with
silica aero gel, (Tri-Die®) or other repellent
material (Microcare).
Advantages: Physical exclusion may be a
permanent solution for an area and reduces
long-term pesticide requirement. Access points
and voids may be quickly treated with products
(chemical exclusion) designed to repel which
limit the influx of some pests and reduce pest
sightings. Exclusion may reduce the use of
chemical insecticides and is considered, by
many, as environmentally friendly.
Application equipment: Caulk, netting, wire
mesh, cement and highly repellent insecticides.
Common pests targeted with this technique: Birds, rodents, cockroaches, flies and
occasional invaders.
Products used: Residual products with repellent
properties such as Tri-Die and Microcare. |
BAITING
Definition: The use of attractive food matrices
combined with effective non-repellent toxicants
designed to kill target insects after feeding on
the bait.
Concept: The goal of baiting is to control
pests by placing an attractive, palatable food
source containing insecticide in locations where
targeted pests will feed. As bait is consumed,
the toxicant has a detrimental effect on the
pest. Baits may be placed in cracks and
crevices, along insect foraging trails or scattered
in harborage areas for crickets.
Advantages: Many customers view baits as
less hazardous than other pesticide formulations
and prefer their use to other pesticides
options. Some bait attractants are insect specific
and pose little threat to non-target organisms.
Some insects utilize social food sharing which aids
in the transfer of the bait throughout the colony.
Application equipment: Gel bait applicators
with Crack & Crevice tip, bait puffers for void
applications, granular spreaders and bait stations.
Common pests targeted with this technique: Ants, termites and cockroaches.
Products used: Baits. |
MONITORING/TRAPPING
Definition: The use of attractive food matrices
combined with effective non-repellent toxicants
designed to kill target insects after feeding on
the bait.
Concept: The goal of baiting is to control
pests by placing an attractive, palatable food
source containing insecticide in locations where
targeted pests will feed. As bait is consumed,
the toxicant has a detrimental effect on the
pest. Baits may be placed in cracks and
crevices, along insect foraging trails or scattered
in harborage areas for crickets.
Advantages: Many customers view baits as
less hazardous than other pesticide formulations
and prefer their use to other pesticides
options. Some bait attractants are insect specific
and pose little threat to non-target organisms.
Some insects utilize social food sharing which aids
in the transfer of the bait throughout the colony.
Application equipment: Gel bait applicators
with Crack & Crevice tip, bait puffers for void
applications, granular spreaders and bait stations.
Common pests targeted with this technique: Ants, termites and cockroaches.
Products used: Baits. |
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