The first step in pest control is to identify the pest and determine how much damage it’s causing. Then, you can decide what tactics to use.
Preventive measures include sealing cracks and crevices, caulking windows, and removing clutter where pests breed and hide. Physical controls include traps, baits, and barriers. Contact Pest Control Tarzana now!
Pest control aims to prevent pests from invading human environments, crops, structures, and personal property. This is achieved through sanitation, biological controls and physical or mechanical means. Pests are unwanted organisms, such as insects (ants, termites, fleas and roaches), rodents (mice and rats) and weeds that cause damage or interfere with plant growth. Other pests, such as bacteria, viruses, fungi and nematodes, cause disease in plants and humans.
Sanitation practices can help control some pests by eliminating food and shelter, such as waste products, stacks of wood or trash and compost piles. Proper trash management and cleaning practices can also reduce the availability of food and shelter for pests, such as by increasing garbage pickup frequency or storing trash in tightly closed containers. Sanitation techniques also can include improved irrigation practices to reduce watering and the presence of standing water, which provide pests with food and moisture.
Biological pest control uses natural organisms to inhibit the growth of pests, such as predation, herbivory and parasitism. These organisms may be bacteria, fungi, viruses, nematodes or other microscopic living creatures such as mycoplasmas and phytoplasmas. In some cases, a combination of organisms is used, such as the use of beneficial nematodes in conjunction with fungicides to control plant diseases.
Physical or mechanical pest control includes traps, screens, barriers and fences, walls, nets, radiation and electricity to alter the environment or restrict access by pests. Chemicals, including fungicides, insecticides and rodenticides are often used in pest control. They are grouped into nonresidual, which lose their toxic effects after they dry or break down and persistent, which remain in the soil or water and are carried to other areas by rain or irrigation.
Eradication is a rare goal in outdoor pest situations, where the best hope is usually suppression and prevention. In indoor spaces, such as homes; schools and office buildings; health care, food processing and storage facilities and restaurants; and warehouses; eradication is more common. Eradication is sometimes attempted in order to protect the public’s health and safety, such as with gypsy moth and Mediterranean fruit fly control programs.
Suppression
The goal of suppression is to reduce pest numbers to a level acceptable for human activities. This may be done by preventing the pests from reproducing, or by killing them or their offspring. This is a common goal in indoor situations where a zero tolerance for the presence of pests (such as bacteria) is required in operating rooms and other sterile areas of health care facilities). Suppression often works in conjunction with prevention as part of integrated pest control.
Suppression tactics can include physical controls (trapping, trapping, and bait stations), biological, and chemical methods. Some physical controls involve creating barriers to pest entry and exit, such as fences, walls, and screens. Others involve removing food sources, water, shelter, or other things that the pests need in order to thrive. Chemical controls can include sprays, powders, or granules designed to kill or repel specific pests.
Identifying the pest and its characteristics is an important step in determining what kind of pest control to employ. This identifies the species and helps to determine its natural enemies, its environment, and whether it is a continuous, sporadic, or migratory pest. It also enables a determination of the appropriate level at which to target the pest management effort.
Some organisms are more likely to become pests than others. This is because they interfere with human activity, damage property, or spread diseases. However, no organism is inherently a pest. Pests are only considered to be such when they negatively impact our living spaces and cause problems that are unacceptable.
Many natural forces act on all organisms, causing their populations to rise and fall. These natural factors include climate, natural enemies, the availability of food and water, and the availability of protective hiding places. The use of resistant varieties or strains of plants, animals, and wood can help keep pest populations below harmful levels. For example, adding boron to cellulose insulation can provide a mechanical kill factor for self-grooming insects such as cockroaches and termites. The EPA regulates this form of pest control, which is used only by licensed professionals.
Eradication
Pests can cause harm to humans by carrying diseases, polluting food, or damaging buildings and other structures. They can also disrupt ecosystems, destroying natural habitats and reducing biodiversity. Pest control is necessary to protect public health, safeguard agriculture and food supplies, preserve property, and maintain environmental balance. Pest control methods vary, from tolerance and deterrence to extermination and eradication.
Pesticides are chemical substances that kill or control pests, such as insects, weeds, and rodents. They are used in agriculture to protect crops from damage and to improve yields, as well as in homes to rid the environment of pests such as ants, cockroaches, and termites. Many pesticides are herbicides, insecticides, or fungicides that target specific types of plants or organisms. Others are bactericides or sporicides that target bacteria, fungi, and viruses.
Biological pest control involves the use of predators, parasites, or pathogens to manage populations of unwanted organisms. This can be done through direct application, or by altering the conditions in which an organism lives to make it less attractive to pests. For example, changing irrigation practices may reduce the availability of water for a plant, making it less attractive to insects.
Physical pest control includes traps, screens, or barriers to prevent the entry of pests into an area. This can be combined with baiting or other chemical methods to provide a more comprehensive approach. Integrated pest management is a holistic approach to managing pests that takes into account the role they play in wider food chains and ecosystems. It combines prevention, suppression, and eradication with other techniques such as biological control and cultural controls, including reduced reproduction, change in feeding behavior, and the use of alternative host plants.
A definition of eradication that is often used in the context of disease control is that it implies that an intervention-altered reproductive rate of the microbe, along with its intermediate and human hosts, has been achieved. However, this is a difficult concept to quantify, as estimates of the rates will depend on the population density of vectors and host populations, the genetic stability of host species, and the presence or absence of resistance. It is important that the benefits of eradication be weighed against its costs, which should include avoided future infections and vaccination costs (i.e., a social dividend).
Integrated Pest Management
Integrated pest management is an ecosystem-based approach to managing pests and their damage in a sustainable way. It combines monitoring, prevention and control through non-chemical means (cultural practices, soil amendments, plant disease management) with the strategic use of limited and least-toxic chemical treatments. IPM uses the best available information about pest biology and ecology, environmental conditions, and their interactions to guide decision making and treatment timing. It emphasizes collaboration between researchers, NIH staff and extramural community partners in order to provide timely, cost effective, and environmentally sensitive pest management services.
IPM strategies focus on preventing the damage caused by pests at every stage of a crop, lawn or indoor environment. This includes stopping them before they start by using preventive methods such as row cover, removing seed heads from berries, planting resistant varieties and altering cultural practices.
If preventive strategies don’t work, IPM programs move on to more targeted and less-aggressive methods like trapping or removing adult insects from plants or using specialized chemicals that only target specific parts of a pest. These options are safer for the environment, people and pets. They also are less likely to build resistance in the unwanted organism, which helps keep the pest population under control.
In more advanced IPM programs, sterile insect technology can be used to reduce populations. These techniques neutralize male flies to prevent them from mating with wild fertile females and thereby stop the generation of new pests. This kind of innovation is a good example of the broader scope that IPM aims to achieve.
Whether you own an office building, hotel or restaurant, having your property free of pests is important to protecting the health and safety of your employees, visitors and customers. It’s also a good way to present your business as one that is committed to the protection of the environment. Integrated Pest Management is a long-term solution that eliminates pests while limiting their damaging effects on your business and the wider community. It also minimizes the need for pesticide spraying, which is harmful to humans and animals, as well as the environment.