
Least Toxic Roach Control
By Barb Ogg, Ph.D and Clyde Ogg
Some
people see a roach and immediately grab a can of "bug spray". But, a
quick spray from an aerosol can won't result in long term control.
Ingredients in most aerosol and "bomb" treatments repel roaches. After
aerosols are sprayed, roaches avoid those sprayed areas. Using these
products can cause the roaches to hide deeper inside walls and be more
difficult to control later. To make the most of your efforts, it is
best to use a multiple tactic approach to control cockroaches. But
first, you need to understand a little about the roaches that live in
our houses, what they need to survive and what actions you can take to
eliminate them.
Living with roaches: Is it so bad? Some folks
don't seem to be bothered by a few roaches, but there are good reasons
to control them. Cockroaches feed on food scraps and garbage, and can
transfer germs by crawling on counter tops, clean dishes, and
silverware. These germs could give you food poisoning and expose you
and your family to other diseases. Another reason to be concerned is
because some people who live in roach infested areas develop allergies
that can trigger asthma.
Cockroach species
There
are four species of cockroaches found in Nebraska homes: the German
cockroach (Blattella germanica, Fig. 1), oriental cockroach (Blatta
orientalis, Fig. 2), brownbanded cockroach (Supella longipalpa, Fig. 3)
and American cockroach (Periplaneta americana, Fig. 4). The two most
common roaches are the German cockroach and the oriental cockroach.
German roaches are usually found in kitchens and bathrooms. Oriental
roaches are more often found in the basement because they like cool,
moist environments and are sometimes called "waterbugs".
Brownbanded cockroaches
can live in kitchens and bathrooms, but you can also find them in
living rooms and bedrooms because they need less water than the German
roach. Compared with southern states, American cockroaches are not
found very often in Nebraska, but they are sometimes found in old
buildings that have steam heat. American cockroaches are also found in
sewer systems.
Cockroach habits
Cockroaches
are most active at night and live in groups. During the day, they live
in cracks and crevices that are dark and moist. Roaches also like to
spend time on porous surfaces, such as wood, cardboard and
paper—because they can saturate these surfaces with their odor—which
attracts other roaches to these areas. Roaches eat anything that is
organic—food scraps and crumbs, grease, garbage, cotton and wool
fabrics, cardboard and wallpaper glue. Roaches also need water,
although the Brownbanded cockroach can live for several weeks with very
little water. Cockroaches prefer to live near their food and water
sources. Take their food and water away and roaches will have a much
harder time living in your home.
Find problem areas
Knowing
what kind of roaches you have can help you know where to focus your
inspecting efforts. Use the pictures to help you. Find sources of the
roach infestation by inspecting and using sticky traps to capture
roaches. Draw a diagram of each room, and start your inspection. Use a
flashlight and a small mirror to peak behind or under appliances and
cabinets. Look for living or dead cockroaches, shed exoskeletons
(cockroach "skins"), egg cases, and roach droppings ("roach specks")
that may look like grains of pepper. If you find live roaches during
your search, use a vacuum cleaner to suck up the roaches and their
debris. You can also find their hiding places at night by quietly
entering a dark room and watching where they run when you turn on the
lights.
Sticky traps
Sticky
traps are an easy way to determine what kind of roach you have and to
get an idea about how many roaches you have. Any sticky traps will
work; it may be cheaper to buy glue boards that are sold for mouse
control. Place traps near evidence of roaches discovered during the
inspection, especially where roach specks are found and locations near
water and food sources. Mark the locations of sticky traps on your
diagram. Write the date on the traps and check the traps weekly. Record
the date, location, type and number of roaches caught. These traps will
be used to judge the success of your control efforts.
Jar traps
Another
type of trap that is very cheap and easy to make is a jar trap. An
empty clean, glass quart mayonnaise jar with slanted shoulders will
work best. Smear a thin film of petroleum jelly on the shoulder area
inside the jar. To bait the jar trap, put a two-inch piece of banana
peel in the bottom of the jar. During the night, cockroaches will smell
the banana peel and crawl into the jar. They won't be able to crawl out
because the petroleum jelly prevents the cockroach from clinging to the
jar. For oriental roaches, attach a paper towel to the outside of the
jar because oriental roaches are unable to climb a glass surface. After
you have captured cockroaches, you can put the lid on the jar and put
it in the freezer for several hours to kill them. Dispose of the dead
cockroaches outside in a trash can and re-use the jar. When there are
high numbers of cockroaches, these jar traps will catch roaches even if
no banana peel is used.
Inspect all the rooms
Kitchens.
Moisture, food and hiding places are reasons why German cockroaches are
often found in the kitchen. Look on the floor underneath and behind
sinks, stoves and other appliances. Inspect all cracks formed by
kitchen cabinets. Especially look for roach specks that may be on the
wall, in cupboards, near cracks and crevices and corners. Where there
are many roach specks, you can be sure that many roaches spend time in
those areas. Examine the edges of drop ceilings, especially above
cooking and dishwashing areas. Check the back of the refrigerator and
around door seals. A careful inspection should reveal "hot spots" where
most of the roaches are living. Focus control efforts in these areas.
Bathrooms:
Moisture is important here. Look for leaky or sweating pipes that may
be adding to the roach problem. Check the bathtub and/or shower and
look for leaking ceramic tile or fiberglass panels that result in water
seeping behind the wall. Check sink overflow cavities and drains;
roaches will also live in these areas.
Basements:
Oriental
cockroaches are most common in basements because they like cool and
moist conditions. They are attracted to floor drains, laundry areas,
basement bathrooms because of the moisture found in these locations.
Moist basements and basements with wall-to-wall carpeting, where
oriental roaches live underneath, are especially challenging. Unlike
other types of roaches, oriental cockroaches can live and breed outside
as well as indoors. Check basement foundations for cracks because they
will come into the house through cracks in the foundation.
Other
rooms:
The brownbanded cockroach doesn't need much water, and is
sometimes found in drier areas of the house, like living rooms and
bedrooms. In these rooms, vacuum drapes and furniture, especially under
cushions and in crevices. Empty and clean book shelves and shake out
books. Look behind picture frames. Check closets, desks, clocks,
radios, stereos, computers, televisions—wherever it is warm and dark.
Reduce moisture Because all roaches need moisture, getting rid of
moisture sources will help eliminate them. Repair leaks, insulate pipes
and seal gaps around sinks, tubs and pipes to keep water from getting
behind walls. Fix worn grout around bathtubs and showers. Seal gaps
around countertops and the splashboards behind the kitchen sink. Keep
the kitchen and bathroom as dry as possible. Wipe up spills. Don't let
water stand in houseplant dishes or in the drip pan under the
refrigerator. Remove pet water dishes overnight.
Eliminate food sources
The
kitchen is a great place for German and brownbanded cockroaches because
it is warm, moist, and has plenty of food. Keep your kitchen very clean
and do not allow grease, crumbs, or clutter to accumulate anywhere.
Move
stoves and refrigerators and scrub on, around, underneath and behind
them. Clean all surfaces, especially between counters and appliances.
Clean cupboards inside and outside. Wipe up cockroach specks and
droppings. Droppings are eaten by baby roaches and attract roaches to
these areas.
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Store all food, including pet food, in tightly sealed, roach-proof
containers. Don't leave bowls of pet food on the floor overnight.
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Garbage
is attractive to roaches. Keep garbage, compost and recyclables in
tightly sealed containers. Empty them daily, preferably in the evening,
because cockroaches are most active at night. Wash and dry dishes,
utensils, pots and pans immediately and don't allow dirty dishes to
remain on the counter top or in the dishwasher overnight.
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Roaches can live underneath poorly fitting refrigerator door seals. Fix them.
Take away their hiding places
Roaches
live in tight spaces with other roaches. Clutter allows more living
spaces for roaches so getting rid of clutter is very important. Do not
store paper bags, containers, cardboard, magazines, newspaper,
equipment boxes or clothes on the floor or wedge paper bags between
appliances or inside cabinets.
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If there are gaps in your kitchen cabinets or between pieces of wood shelving, clean, vacuum and seal them with silicon caulk.
Remove drawers in the kitchen and inspect inside the frame.
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Seal
small openings that are pathways into your home. If you live in an
apartment building, pay special attention to walls that adjoin other
units.
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Repair cracks and crevices in basement walls and floors.
Steel wool may be inserted into cracks for a quick fix. Cover drains in
the basement and floors with window screening. Tighten loose windows
and seal gaps around doors with weather-striping.
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Seal gaps
around water, gas and heating pipes, both indoors and out. Don't forget
cracks around heat registers, air ducts, electrical boxes and false
ceilings.
Replace missing or damaged baseboards.
Immature
(baby) cockroaches live in very tiny cracks. In extreme cases, when
there are no cracks or crevices available, German and brownbanded
roaches can live underneath the labels of canned goods and eat the glue
off the paper labels. To take away these hiding places, remove labels
and use a marker to label the contents.
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Outside, remove debris and trim ground cover near the building. Move firewood and garbage cans away from the building.
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Wipe out roaches using low toxic methods
It
is best to use the least toxic control method that will eliminate your
cockroach infestation. It doesn't make sense to expose your family,
your pets and yourself to a toxic insecticide when the lower toxic
methods are just as effective.
Roach control
methods:
Starting with non-toxic actions progressing toward more toxic
methods. It makes sense to use non-toxic methods first and more toxic
methods only if the non-toxic ones fail to solve the problem.
Vacuuming:
It seems too simple...but it works. To quickly reduce cockroach
populations that you find behind appliances or in cupboards, have a
vacuum cleaner ready and suck them up. The hose attachment works best.
When you're done, remove the vacuum bag, seal it inside a plastic or
paper bag, then dispose of both bags, preferably outside the house. Or,
place the sealed bag in the freezer for a few hours to kill the
roaches, then toss them in the garbage.
Hot
and cold treatments:
Extreme temperatures will kill
cockroaches. It isn't very practical to let your house freeze in the
winter. But, you can kill roaches in small appliances, furniture or
paper goods by letting them sit outside (below 20-degrees F) for
several days or by placing the item in the freezer compartment for
several hours.
Sticky traps or jar taps:
Trapping will reduce
the number of roaches so continue to use them in places where you have
caught them before. It is almost impossible to get rid of all the
roaches with traps alone so you will need to use some other control
methods, too.
Baits:
The biggest improvement to controlling
cockroaches in recent years is the availability of effective bait
products. They can be found in hardware stores, drug stores, discount
stores, home centers, supermarkets and even web sites that sell pest
control products. Insecticide baits are available in small plastic
containers (bait stations) or as a dispensable gel. Baits are safe for
the environment and not harmful to people or pets. Slow-acting baits
work best. Use baits that have hydramethylnon, fipronil, boric acid or
sulfluramid as their active ingredient (see Table 1). The active
ingredient will be found on the product label.
Bait
stations can be stuck to the walls, but change them often because after
they are empty, roaches will hide in them. Gel baits are very effective
and can be placed in wall voids and cracks and crevices where the bait
stations won't fit. If the gel bait is eaten or dries up, you will need
to replace it.
Be patient;
Baits take several weeks to see
results. Cockroaches will use the bait as a food source, but you must
eliminate other food sources as much as possible during the time you
are baiting. Some roaches will eat the bait and be poisoned; others
will be poisoned when they eat the dead roach bodies or the droppings.
Don't use pesticides or household cleaners near the baits because they
may repel cockroaches away from the baits.
Set
the baits in "hot spots"—close to where sticky traps have caught
roaches, or where you have seen roach specks or droppings. Placement is
important. For German and brownbanded cockroaches, set bait stations
next to walls and flush in corners. For American and oriental
cockroaches set bait stations in the basement near floor or sewer
drains or in damp crawl spaces.
Active ingredient and examples of product names
abamectin
Avert Cockroach Gel Bait
Avert Dry Flowable Cockroach Bait
Boric acid
Blue Diamond Roach Food
Niban FG
Pic Roach Killer Gel
Roach Free System
Fipronil
Combat Quick Kill Formula
Max Force Professional Roach Killer Gel Bait FC - with fipronil
Hydramenthylnon
Combat Roach Killing Gel
Combat Source Kill
Max Force Professional Insect Control Granular Bait
Max Force Professional Roach Killer Gel Bait - with hydramethylnon
Siege Gel Insecticide
Sulfluramid
Raid Max Roach Bait
Dusts:
Silica (including silica dioxide, silica gel and silica aerogel) and
diatomaceous earth damage the waxy coating of the roach's body, causing
it to shrivel and die. Boric acid is a readily available dust that
roaches ingest when they groom themselves. It acts as a stomach poison,
but is one of the safest control products to use around people and
pets. Look for these dusts in hardware stores, drug stores, discount
stores, home centers, supermarkets and even web sites that sell pest
control products (see Table 2). Apply dusts in very thin layers
underneath appliances and inside void areas (such as wall voids and
voids around cabinets). Only apply dusts in areas inaccessible to
children and pets.
Common
dust active ingredients found in cockroach control products. This may
not be a complete listing and all products are not available nationwide.
Active ingredient and examples of product names
Boric acid
Borid Boric Acid Dust
Perma-Dust Pressurized Boric Acid Dust
Pic Boric Acid Roach Killer Gel
Pic Boric Acid Roach Killer III Powder
Roach Prufe
Victor Roach
Killing Powder
Datomaceous earth
Diatomaceous Earth
Roach and Ant Killer D-E Dust
Safer Ant & Crawling Insect Killer
Silica (silica dioxide, silica gel and silica aerogel)
DeltaDust (also contains pyrethrins)
Drione Dust (also contains pyrethrins)
Safer Ant & Crawling Insect Killer (also contains diatomaceous earth)
Tri-Die Pressurized Silica + Pyrethrin Dust (also contains pyrethrin)
Always
read and follow the directions on the product label carefully. Use only
products that are labeled for in-home use. Listing of products is not
necessarily an endorsement by the University of Nebraska.
Continue to check
Once you get your cockroach problem under control, continue to use sticky traps to monitor for the reappearance
of roaches. Cockroach populations grow quickly. Getting rid of a few roaches is easier than getting rid of many.
Working with a professional
You
may want to hire a pest control professional to help you, especially if
you have a large infestation. If pesticides are needed, professionals
are trained to apply pesticides safely. But, they can still use low
toxic methods, like baits, to control the infestation in your home.
If
you live in a multi-family dwelling and there is a serious roach
problem, contact the apartment manager. If you get an unsatisfactory
response, contact your local health department.
Curtesy of University of Nebraska Cooperative Extension in Lancaster County http://lancaster.unl.edu/pest/
 This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 2.5 License.
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