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PEST CONTROL NEWS
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Lawn chemicals not killing birds
Chocolate kills birds
 

 

Compost Recycling Bins Cause Rat Problems in Ottawa 
Since the spring, the National Capital Commission has been receiving an unusually high number of complaints about rats in Confederation Park, a small patch of green space that faces city hall and lies next to the famed Rideau Canal. There have been so many rat sightings that the commission has hired pest-control professionals to take control action.

Perhaps Ottawa’s new green-box recycling program has provided enough compost to keep the rats fat and happy or perhaps the mild winter, which was followed by an early spring, was conducive to breeding. Martin Lee, a biochemistry researcher who happened across reporters on a rat hunt on Wednesday, pointed to one of the rodents sitting in a clearing under a tree". "They are very opportunistic. If there is food around, they will go for it,” Mr. Lee said. “I am a little bit shocked that they are out during the day”.  Ottawa’s exterminators are doing a brisk business ridding homes of the furry pests, which are also populating suburban garages and feasting on the bounty from the green boxes. David Saunders, president of Paramount Pest Control, said it’s no coincidence that the rats are multiplying in the same year that Ottawa introduced the composting program.  “There’s more rats for sure,” Mr. Saunders said. “One hundred per cent more rats.”  Organic matter that sits in a green box all week sending out the delicious aromas of banana peels, egg shells and oranges, is just too strong a temptation for rats to resist, Mr. Saunders said.  If a compost recycling bin is not closed properly, the rodents will come.

 

All-natural bedbug sprays have little effect

Products such as Rest Easy and Bed Bug Bully claim to be highly effective at controlling the insects, but researchers say there aren't yet any consumer products proven to keep bedbugs away.

As worry about bedbugs grows, it's no surprise that many people are taking pest control into their own hands. Do-it-yourselfers   can choose from many different sprays that claim to kill the bugs and prevent infestations. Some products, like Rest Easy Bed Bug Spray, are sold as all-natural alternatives to traditional pesticides. Rest Easy, manufactured by the RMB Group, contains essential oils from cinnamon and lemon grass, among other ingredients. Bed Bug Bully, produced by a company called My Cleaning Products, claims to be 100% natural. The company website doesn't list any ingredients, but a sales manager claims that the spray ingredients include tea tree oil and lavender.

A 16-ounce spray bottle of Rest Easy — sold at many Walgreens, Ace Hardware and other stores — costs about $16. The company website instructs users to spray Rest Easy on "dressers drawers, closets, along baseboards, behind headboards, and around any other furniture you want treated." The site advises against spraying the bed directly. "If bed bugs are present in the bed," the site says, "call a professional for extermination."

A 32-ounce bottle of Bed Bug Bully, available at many drugstores, retails for about $50. A video tutorial on the company website encourages users to spray "wherever you think bedbugs may be."

The claims
The Rest Easy website says that its "optimized blend of natural ingredients has been universally recognized for thousands of years as a means for controlling insects." In a phone interview, company President Howard Brenner said, "We are all-natural and highly effective." He also said that people who have a serious and obvious infestation should call an exterminator. "Our product is for people who think they might have bedbugs or are paranoid that they might get them."

The Bed Bug Bully site says the product is "by far the best bed bug treatment you can get on the market today." It also promises "the same results delivered by pest service without evacuation."

The bottom line
Gail Getty, a research entomologist at UC Berkeley, says she'd love to see a day when people could quickly solve their bedbug problems on their own. "I want to encourage new research. It would be great if there was something that was safe and effective." Unfortunately, she says, no consumer products on the market today have been proved to completely remove bedbugs from the home. Because bedbugs are so adept at hiding, and because any bugs you can target with a spray are going to just be the tip of the infestation, it really takes a professional exterminator to get rid of the bugs, she says.

Jones, the Ohio State University entomologist, is especially leery of "all-natural" products. "If you think that using these sprays is going to get rid of your bedbugs, you are sorely mistaken." Jones points out that pesticide-free products such as Bed Bug Bully or Rest Easy aren't required by the Environmental Protection Agency to prove that they are actually effective against bugs — all that matters is that they are considered safe. Jones adds that even professional exterminators armed with industrial-strength chemicals generally need several hours to clean out an infestation. "If somebody goes in and out in 15 minutes, you just wasted your money."

 

Canadian Pest Professionals meet with Pesticide regulators seeking product approval to combat bedbugs.

The Canadian Pest Management Association (CPMA) has met with the Pest Management Regulatory Agency (PMRA) in Ottawa to discuss proposed rodenticide uses and the registration of new products to combat bed bugs.

CPMA's goal was to present PMRA with evidence as to why a section of the proposal should be amended to follow suit of a recent Environmental Protection Agency ruling in the United States to allow rodenticides to be used within 50 feet of a structure. The second meeting   discussed the industry’s depleted product choices for bed bug treatments and the need for the relabeling of existing products within Canada to include bed bugs as well as bringing in new formulations currently in use in the United States.  CPMA was very pleased to find that PMRA shared our concerns and were more than willing to assist in the processes involved. 


 

 

 

 

 It's Spider Season
Arachnophobia spreading like a virus

  As summer days get shorter, and dusk brings dampness that clings to every surface by dawn, natures most prolific insect predator is showing up for photo opportunities.

  More than half the recent photos sent to this web site for identification include some of the thousands of species of Arachnids.

A sample of the numerous photos submitted to "What is this Pest".

    Most submissions include the question: "Are they Dangerous"?  The most common example of an animal-based phobia is fear of spiders, or Arachnophobia. This fear prompts many to scurry for their digital cameras and snap a picture before the little creature bites them and runs away.  Most of these fears are unfounded. More information on spiders can be found at the links below:

How to get rid of spiders

Spider Bites

Bite treatment

Spider Identification photos and descriptions
 

Lawn Chemicals Not Killing Birds

The Audubon Society once again is scaring the public about pesticides. Almost 30 years after its successful — but untruthful — campaign against the insecticide DDT, the Audubon Society is targeting lawn chemicals used to control grubs, fungus and weeds.

In a recent op-ed in Long Island's Newsday, Audubon Society staffers claimed that New York state wildlife pathologists determined pesticide poisoning was the "single leading cause of death among birds" in New York.

"Birds are well-known indicators of environmental perils. They warned about DDT in the 1970s. They warned us about West Nile [virus]. Now they're warning us again," the piece said.

We need to be warned to ignore such blather from the Audubon Society.

Here's the real story about the New York pathology report.

Because of West Nile virus, investigators at the state wildlife laboratory in Elmar analyzed 3,216 bird carcasses sent in by New Yorkers. In March 2001, the lab issued a report on the carcasses that the scientists had analyzed to that point. West Nile virus was blamed for 1,263 deaths. Other toxins were to blame in 1,953 deaths. The Audubon Society wants you to believe that the toxin-related deaths are due to pesticides used for lawn care.

The New York report indicated that pesticides were identified in 219 bird deaths. But that number is misleading. Thirty of those birds were killed by a product intended for eliminating nuisance birds such as starlings, and 100 of them were deliberately and illegally killed when someone laced bread with an insecticide not available to homeowners.

The report, in fact, indicates that lawn care pesticides might have been involved in only 27 bird deaths — less than one percent of the deaths investigated. Even accepting the report at face value, lawn care pesticides are hardly the leading cause of bird deaths in New York.

Ironically, the toxin identified as the leading culprit in 1,100 of the bird deaths was botulinum — the bacterium that causes the nervous system disease botulism. The source of the botulinum? Mother Nature, herself.  She slipped it to Lake Erie water birds through zebra mussels. Many tend to envision Mother Nature as a gentle lady. But sometimes she can be more like the Mommy Dearest described by Joan Crawford's daughter.

Such details, though, are of little concern to the Audubon Society, the early force behind DDT hysteria in the 1960s. Though the Audubon Society claimed that DDT was harming birds, its own bird census data from 1960 showed that bird populations were increasing during the years DDT was most heavily used.

DDT was blamed for declines in populations of bald eagles, peregrine falcons and brown pelicans. But all three-bird populations hit their all-time population lows before DDT was first used in 1943.

Bald eagles were on the verge of extinction in the 1920s.  Alaska paid over $100,000 in bounties for 115,000 bald eagles between 1917 and 1942. The bald eagle had vanished from New England a decade before DDT was used. There were 5,000 brown pelicans in Texas in 1918, but only 200 in 1941. As to peregrine falcons, Dr. William Hornaday of the New York Zoological Society referred to them in 1913 as birds that "deserve death, but are so rare that we need not take them into account."

When scientists brought the bird census reports to light during the DDT hysteria in the 1960s, the Audubon Society accused "certain paid scientist-spokesmen" of lying. After The New York Times recounted this accusation in August 1972, the scientists filed a libel suit against an official of the National Audubon Society and the Times.

During the pre-trial depositions, the founder of the Environmental Defense Fund, a spin-off of the National Audubon Society, said that discussions at the EDF with National Audubon Society officials centered around ways to silence and discredit opponents of their stand on DDT.

The jury returned verdicts against the Times and the National Audubon Society official. Both verdicts were subsequently overturned on appeal on legal, not factual, grounds. The appellate judge was Irving Kaufman, a close friend of Times publisher Arthur Ochs Sulzberger.

The overturning of the jury verdicts wasn't the first time in the DDT saga that the truth fell victim to other considerations.

An administrative law judge of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency presided over 7 months and 9,000 pages of testimony about DDT. The judge concluded, based on the evidence produced, that DDT did not present a threat either to wildlife or humans. Then-EPA Administrator — and Environmental Defense Fund member — William Ruckleshaus banned DDT anyway.

National Audubon Society skullduggery helped deep-six DDT — a chemical that was credited in a 1970 National Research Council report with saving hundreds of millions of lives. It makes you wonder what the odds are of lawn care chemicals surviving a similar campaign.

Steven Milloy is the publisher of JunkScience.com, an adjunct scholar at the Cato Institute and the author of the upcoming book Junk Science Judo: Self-defense Against Health Scares and Scams (Cato Institute, 2001).

 

 

Death by Chocolate
National Post

Early last year, a flock of gulls feasting on some uneaten Valentine's Day chocolate dumped at a local landfill fell dead from the skies. The cause of death, announced by the provincial agriculture office in Abbotsford, B.C., was "chocolate toxicity."

For many animals, the active ingredients in chocolate -- caffeine and theobromine -- can be lethal. The manager of the dump told The Vancouver Sun that chocolate should not even be mixed in with ordinary landfill garbage. In the interests of public safety, therefore, this newspaper feels duty-bound to call for an immediate and permanent ban on all chocolate products.

The editorial says we take our cue for this drastic, but obviously necessary, move from the anti-pesticide lobby. Unlikely though it may seem, the campaign to eliminate pesticides from household use, led by the Council of Canadians and supported by a Parliamentary Committee report last year, actually has less basis in science or logic than our proposed chocolate ban. Recall that the committee, headed by Liberal MP Charles Caccia, was able to justify calls for sweeping bans and reductions on pesticides without the need for any proof that they are dangerous to humans. The mere fact that they kill living things was enough.

"Pesticides are highly poisonous substances designed to kill living organisms and are thus potentially harmful to workers using them ... as well as consumers," Mr. Caccia wrote in his report.

Well this certainly applies to chocolate. It is fatal not to tiny bugs and weeds, but to higher life forms such as birds and dogs. Chocolate contains sugar, too, which induces obesity and, therefore, an increased risk of life-threatening diseases such as diabetes. The choice is clear: Chocolate must go.

Watch this space for more health-related editorials in the future. Next week: Bananas: the yellow menace.

 

 

Electronic Rodent Control Devices Are A Scam
We get numerous questions submitted to "ask the experts" regarding electronic rodent control. Here is a typical example:

  In your answer to the question #122 and several others - 'do these electronic devices really work' - you state that if they did, pest professionals would be using them.  I feel that it would be counter-productive for pest control companies to use these devices, as their services would no longer be necessary, thus putting you out of business. I am an informed consumer and will be looking elsewhere for completely unbiased information on these devices.   Diane.  Coombs, BC. 

Thank you for your input on this subject.  We would be pleased to hear from you again when you have found some unbiased information that favors the use of electronic rodent control devices.  We will publish that information on the home page of this web site.  We have been researching these devices for years and so far the only unbiased info we have been able to find has all been negative. For example here is a quote from a study done at The University of California/Davis:
   "Although mice are easily frightened by strange or unfamiliar noises, they quickly become accustomed to regularly repeated sounds. Ultrasonic sounds, those above the range of human hearing, have very limited use in rodent control because they are directional and do not penetrate behind objects. They also lose their intensity quickly with distance. There is little evidence that electronic, sound, magnetic, or vibration devices of any kind will drive established mice or rats from buildings or provide adequate control. Despite their lack of effectiveness, many such devices continue to be sold through magazine advertisements and at some retail outlets."

You can read more on this study on this web page: http://www.ipm.ucdavis.edu/PMG/PESTNOTES/pn7483.html 

Another good source of information is the Illinois Department of Health
http://www.idph.state.il.us/envhealth/pchousemouse.htm 

Although we have been approached a number of times to publish ads for these devices on the Pest Control Canada web site, we have refused on legal and moral grounds.  We have also turned down advertising revenue from a wholesale supplier that included these devices in their catalogue.  We suggest that any pest management business using or selling these devices should not be trusted. 

Larry Cross
Webmanager
P.S.: Read some of the other questions and answers or send us yours.

 

Bed Bug feeding from the arm of a 'voluntary' human host.

HOW TO GET RID OF BEDBUGS  

   
Find the solution to your infestation.

      Bed Bug Control Products and Professional Control Solutions

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