Posts Tagged ‘Georgia Pest Control’

Bug Busters USA encourages public awareness of household pests in April

Tuesday, April 2nd, 2013

Bug Busters USA encourages public awareness of household pests in April

This April, Bug Busters USA is proud to celebrate National Pest Management Month, which is formally recognized each year by the National Pest Management Association (NPMA). The observance acknowledges the pest management industry’s commitment to the protection of public health and property from common household pests such as rodents, ants, termites, bed bugs and cockroaches.

During National Pest Management Month, Bug Busters encourages public awareness of pests and reminds homeowners to pest-proof the home this spring.

“As the weather continues to warm, pests will begin to emerge from their overwintering sites and look for food indoors. To prevent an infestation, homeowners should take some time to pest-proof their home in the coming weeks,” said Court Parker, COO at Bug Busters USA. “From sealing openings and removing debris around the foundation of the home to eliminating sources of moisture indoors, a few simple home maintenance projects can keep pests from causing problems this spring.”

NPMA experts also recommend the following tips to add to the spring cleaning check list:

  • Repair fascia and rotted roof shingles.
  • Replace weather-stripping and repair loose mortar around the foundation and windows.
  • Keep tree branches and shrubbery well trimmed and away from the house.
  • Store fire wood at least 20 feet away from the house and five inches off the ground.
  • Eliminate sources of standing water around the house, including birdbaths and in clogged gutters.
  • Keep basements, attics, and crawl spaces well ventilated and dry.
  • Store garbage in sealed containers and dispose of it regularly.’
  • Avoid leaving pet’s food dishes out for long periods of time.

“Taking preventative measures is the best defense against pests, but occasionally an unwanted critter can sneak by unnoticed,” added Parker. “If an infestation is suspected, contact a licensed pest professional to treat the problem.”

For more information on common household pest or pest-proofing tips, please visit www.bugbustersusa.com

Help Bug Busters USA Make A Difference

Thursday, October 11th, 2012

Help Bug Busters USA Make A Difference!

Join Camp Twin Lakes and its Partners for our 7th annual fundraising bike ride weekend.100% of every dollar donated helps provide life changing camp experiences for Georgia’s children facing serious illnesses, disabilities and life challenges to camp!
Make it a full weekend by joining us Saturday night for dinner and renting a cabin at camp by clicking here.

SATURDAY’S MOUNTAIN BIKE RIDE – 2012
The Mountain Bike Ride will take place on Saturday, October 20, 2012 at Camp Twin Lakes- Will-A-Way at Fort Yargo State Park! Start from camp and choose the 8-mile, 12-mile or 20-mile loop and ride along the adventurous and beautiful trails of Fort Yargo State Park! All courses will be supported with several rest stops and have easy access to SAG support. After the ride, bikers are invited to join their friends and family for a Thank You Luncheon. Saturday riders can also participate in Sunday’s ride!SUNDAY’S ROAD BIKE RIDE – 2012
On Sunday, October 21, 2012, rides will begin and end at Camp Twin Lakes- Rutledge, located 50 miles east of Atlanta. The routes will take riders through rural Northeast Georgia and the historic towns of Madison and Rutledge. Five courses will allow riders of various skill levels, from the occasional rider to the experienced cyclist, to participate in this exciting event. This year, we will feature 5, 27, 47, 62, and 100-mile rides. All routes are fully supported with premium rest stops, SAG wagons, and motorcycle escorts.FAMILY FUN DAY CELEBRATION
All Spin for Kids riders, along with their friends and family, are invited to experience the beautiful facilities at Camp Twin Lakes- Rutledge throughout the day on Sunday. Following the road bike ride, join us for a post-ride celebration featuring lunch from Taco Mac, music, and fun camp activities for everyone. Be sure to take advantage of our Day Campfor children of riders.FUNDRAISING MINIMUM
Each participant over the age of 18 will be required to raise a minimum of $100 to participate in either ride (not including the registration fee). Each participant between the ages of 12 and 17 will be required to raise a minimum of $50. Riders who have not fulfilled the minimum will be asked to pay the difference at ride check-in on October 20th or 21st.100% of every dollar donated helps provide life changing camp experiences for Georgia’s children facing serious illnesses, disabilities and life challenges to camp!

West Nile Virus infographic

Tuesday, October 9th, 2012

Take a look at this West Nile Virus infographic. Thank you to our friends at Hulett Environmental and the PPMA for sharing this with us!

Five signs it’s time to call in a pest pro

Friday, March 30th, 2012

Five signs it’s time to call in a pro

As a homeowner, you know there are some home projects you can take on yourself (painting the guest room) and some that are better left to the professionals (installing electrical wiring in the basement). The same logic goes for pest control. In some cases, do-it-yourself measures are fine but in others, it is best to call in a pest professional to ensure the job is done correctly and safely. So how do you know which pest scenarios are DIY-approved and which are pro-worthy?

In most cases, the answer depends on the several factors, including the type of pest, its threats to your family’s health, the potential for property damage and the size of the infestation. For example, one lone yellow jacket that found its way into your home is no cause for alarm. But a nest of yellow jackets near your front porch? Time to call in the pros.

Specifically, here are a few pests that you should leave to the pros:

1.    Termites

Termites are especially destructive pests that cause more than $5 billion in property damage every year. These wood-eating insects use their scissor-like jaws to chew through walls, floors and ceilings 24 hours a day, seven days a week. This means that a termite infestation can cause serious property damage and compromise the structural stability of your home in a relatively short amount of time. What’s worse, damage from wood-boring insects like termites is not typically covered by homeowners’ insurance policies. Pest professionals are trained to understand the unique biology and behaviors of termites. They can perform routine inspections to spot early signs of a problem, and if necessary, have the tools and know-how to effectively treat an infestation.

 2.    Other wood-boring insects

Like termites, other wood-boring insects such as carpenter ants, carpenter bees and powder post beetles should be taken seriously. Carpenter ants, for example, excavate wood in order to build their nests. Their excavation results in smooth tunnels inside the wood. Carpenter bees, on the other hand, bore through soft woods to lay eggs and protect their larvae as they develop. Powderpost beetles can be equally as destructive. These beetles create tunnels in unfinished wood during their larvae stage, reducing it to a fine, flour-like powder. Once the powderpost beetles reach adulthood – as much as a year to five years later – they emerge and lay eggs on the wood, continuing the cycle. Given time, wood-boring pests can damage important support beams in your home, resulting in expensive repairs.

 3.    Bed Bugs

Bed bugs are certainly not a pest that should be handled on your own. For one, they are notoriously elusive, often hiding out in hard to detect places like behind electrical switches and under wallpaper. A trained pest professional will know where bed bugs are likely to hide in your home and can develop a treatment plan to target the pests while ensuring the safety of your family and pets.

To effectively treat a bed bug infestation all stages of the bed bug life cycle must be treated, including bed bug eggs, nymphs (babies) and adult bed bugs. Unfortunately, DIY pest control methods are often ineffective against bed bug nymphs and eggs. Attempts to control a bed bug infestation on your own may only exacerbate the problem and give the infestation time to grow. And bed bugs reproduce quickly – one female bed bug can lay one to five eggs in a day and more than 500 in their lifetime, meaning that a small infestation can quickly grow out of control.

In addition, homeowners that attempt to control a bed bug infestation on their own often spend more money in the long run on failed treatments. Some residents with bed bug infestations unnecessarily throw out furniture, clothing and other personal property in an attempt to control an infestation. In extreme cases, homeowners have seriously damaged their homes or sickened their families by misusing pest control products.

 4.    Stinging Insects

Infestations of any type of stinging insect – such as wasps, yellow jackets or fire ants – should always be left up to the professionals. Stinging insects pose serious health risks. In fact, they send half a million people to the emergency room every year. A single colony of stinging insects can contain anywhere from a few hundred to 80,000 members, which can attack if their nest is threatened. Those with allergies to insect stings are especially at risk, but if a large nest of stinging insects attacks, it can be life threatening to anyone.

 5.    Reoccurring or heavy infestations

No matter the type of pest, if you have an infestation that keeps coming back no matter what you try, it’s time to contract a professional. Reoccurring pest infestations are a sign that your home is just too enticing for pests. Perhaps a small access point (such as a tear in a window screen or a crack in the foundation) is providing easy access indoors for ants. Or perhaps a drip under the bathroom sink is creating the perfect conditions for cockroaches. Whatever it is, a trained pest professional will inspect your home, determine the infestation and help you resolve it once and for all.

DIY methods are also no match for heavy pest infestations.  Because many pests pose serious health and property threats, a sizable pest infestation should be left up to the professionals to handle, before it can grow any larger.

As a homeowner, there are a lot of DIY steps you can take to help prevent pests from finding their way into your home, but even these are most effective when completed in partnership with a pest professional. And, if you suspect you have an infestation, your first step should always be to call a licensed and trained pest professional. They will be able to properly identify your pest problem and recommend an appropriate course of treatment.

Mild winters may shift spread of mosquito-borne illness

Thursday, March 15th, 2012

Mild winters may shift spread of mosquito-borne illness

Species that transmits brain virus in the Southeast may turn to mammals earlier in warmer years
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Blushing red as she fills up on blood, a female Culex erraticus mosquito taps a mammal. Weather the previous winter plays a large role in when this species makes its annual shift from bird to mostly mammal blood.Courtesy of Nathan Burkett-Cadena

Mild winters appear to speed annual menu changes for disease-carrying mosquitoes. And the revised biting patterns might play an overlooked role in worsening the risk of brain infections in people and horses.

The mosquito Culex erraticus spreads the virus that causes eastern equine encephalitis. It’s an uncommon but often lethal disease, killing about half of the people who contract it and virtually all the infected horses. Populations of C. erraticus, like some other mosquitoes, start their biting season targeting mostly birds but end up focusing on deer, horses, people and other mammals.

The timing of when the insects shift from birds to mammals varies a lot from year to year among C. erraticus mosquitoes in Alabama, says entomologist Nathan Burkett-Cadena of the University of South Florida in Tampa. He and his colleagues discovered this variation after eight years of trapping mosquitoes and genetically identifying which bird and mammal species had provided the blood the insects were digesting. In years such as 2007, mosquito populations went mammalian in May or June, but in 2003 waited until August.

“This is the first time that anyone has documented strong year-to-year variation in the timing of the host shift,” Burkett-Cadena says.

The severity of the previous winter turned out to explain most of the variation in timing, Burkett-Cadena and his colleagues report online March 7 in Biology Letters. Milder winters typically meant earlier shifts, whereas harsher winters more often led to delayed shifts.

Birds serve as a reservoir of the virus, and mosquitoes pick it up when biting them. So shifts to mammal targets matter in determining the timing and intensity of mosquito-borne diseases in any particular year, according to earlier work on menaces such as West Nile virus. For C. erraticus and eastern equine encephalitis, timing of the shift isn’t the only factor, Burkett-Cadena says. Yet “this is a piece of the puzzle and it’s a very large piece.”

For understanding the bird/mammal shift, “this paper is a great start,” says Laura D. Kramer of New York State Department of Health’s Wadsworth Center in Albany. Next she’d like to know what other factors, such as the density of mosquito populations, also nudge the timing of the bite changes.

Biting is a motherhood thing among mosquitoes, as only females bite and only on the two or three occasions in their lives when they need a huge, high-protein meal to meet the demands of laying eggs.

Just why the previous winter might change an expecting mosquito’s diet may have something to do with bird nesting, Burkett-Cadena speculates. An adult bird sitting on eggs or chicks too young to fly should make convenient targets for a blood-seeking mosquito. After mild winters, though, the great blue and yellow-crowned night herons that the mosquitoes favor tend to nest early. After the brood has fledged, the birds may not be as convenient a target so the female mosquitoes, now carrying the virus, may start to focus on mammals.

Flying Insects Captured in 3D

Wednesday, March 7th, 2012

“Flydra,” a new multi-camera, real-time, three-dimensional method of recording multiple flying animals, shows the minutest details of airborne insects. Click link at right to get the whole story. This movie shows various 2-D cameras tracking…

Bug Photos!

Friday, February 10th, 2012

Checkout some of these great bug shots! Do you have a great insect photo? Email it to us at marketing@bugbustersusa.com and we will post it on the blog. :-)

Order Scutigeromorpha Family scutigeridae Scutigera coleoptrata House centipede, has much longer legs than typical centipedes, known to prey on cockroaches and other household pests,

Order Hemiptera Family Rhopalidae (Scentless plant bugs) Boisea trivittata Boxelder bug, highly specialized, feeds exclusively on the seeds of Acer (maple, boxelder)

Order Hemiptera Family Pyrrhocoridae (cotton Stainers) Dysdercus suterellus, found year round in gardens, parks, vacant lots & cultivated fields, feed on plants like hibiscus, citruses

Lyme disease map pinpoints high-risk areas

Wednesday, February 8th, 2012

Via http://i.i.com.com/cnwk.1d/i/tim/2012/02/07/lymediseasemap_610x458.jpg

The CDC counted more than 30,000 confirmed or probable cases of Lyme in 2010, the latest data available. More than 90 percent of those cases were in 12 states: Connecticut, Delaware, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Jersey, New Hampshire, New York, Pennsylvania, Virginia and Wisconsin.

Malaria No More ~ “Netman” Comic for All Ages!

Friday, January 6th, 2012

Malaria No More Comic for All Ages!

Malaria No More is determined to end malaria deaths in Africa by 2015. Malaria is a preventable and treatable disease and recent progress shows that malaria’s days are numbered — but we need your help. Together, we can make malaria no more.

Pest Control Services

Thursday, January 5th, 2012

Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Alabama Pest Control