I often don’t get called into a pest issue until it’s fairly bad. It’s been going on for months, (if not years), it has not been getting any better (or it’s been getting worse), and multiple things have already been tried (hopefully). A consistent theme is two questions: “we never had this problem, why do we have it now?”, and “why isn’t it getting better?” While pest issues can happen to anyone, anywhere, this commonly happens with German cockroaches.
Cockroaches – why you don’t have a problem until you have a problem
First, cockroaches are small, sneaky, and nocturnal. Most people don’t notice any issues with German cockroaches until they are running around the kitchen floor and they see them. Unfortunately, this is after populations have built up and the chance of seeing one out of ten thousand is a lot greater than seeing one out of ten. There are just more of them out foraging and foraging not just in the midnight hours. Think of this from another perspective: a spider gets in and sets up her little home in the corner behind the desk. You don’t see her, she’s small and only needs to eat a few little insects every so often. But she’s also carrying an egg sac. When it hatches, you know have 300 little spiders all running around looking for food. It’s not until the numbers have increased, over months and months, that a problem is finally noticed visually.
German cockroaches are also masters at hiding. Estimates are that an average population of these cockroaches is around 20% and the nymphs are around 80% of the population. This means that only 20% are fully grown and the rest are even smaller; harder to see. Also, German cockroach nymphs tend to hide better than adults do. In fact, there are some estimates that they do not come out of their hiding spots at all until they are nearly adults. How does this work? Since these cockroaches live in close contact with each other, almost as a colony, the adults bring back little pieces of food stuck to their legs and bodies. They also exude what is basically cockroach sweat the nymphs will feed on. One more food source: nymphs are coprophagous, they eat feces of the adults. So if you are a tiny little insect, that has a safe and warm hiding spot, and food delivered in on a regular basis, why would you come out? So that population continues to build up in that wall void behind the stove, until it is thousands if not millions of individuals.
So you are smart and having monitoring devices placed down so there’s an extra set of “eyes” on finding these early. Yet there is still a problem. Monitors, specifically glue boards, are often get placed in areas that aren’t going to have or be near cockroaches and their hiding spots. Placing these on top of the fridge or under the stove is going to be a better indication of issues than in a utility closet or linen closet. The problem with this is they often need to be in hard to reach areas that someone literally can’t get to, or if they do, they get forgotten about and ignored. So the cockroaches go on doing their cockroach thing.
But you looked and didn’t see anything! Remember that they hide. In one study of apartments, 50% of the residents didn’t know they had a problem. These are residents that live there so someone is in that space daily. Even for professionals, inspections can miss places. There are areas that are excessively cluttered, sanitation issues, and locked doors that can’t be accessed. I had a situation where we inspected a large facility that was having German cockroach issues. We had it narrowed down to employee areas: kitchen, breakroom, locker rooms. The area was deep cleaned (you wouldn’t believe what was behind the vending machines…ugh), treated with multiple means, and saw numbers quickly go down. They didn’t stay down, our monitors and inspections started to show increases again. Turns out, the individual lockers were never cleaned and emptied and because we didn’t have keys, we couldn’t get in to inspect each one. Once this was discovered, the issue was addressed (employees were not allowed to store ANY food in their lockers from then on), and we had the problem under control.
Aside from the harborages they can take advantage of (ever move that board outside and see all the insects scurry out from under it?), there are all the hidden sanitation issues which provide food. While German cockroaches may be one of the most common structural pests, other pests utilize the same survival strategies. Think of mice hiding behind a freezer and tunneling into the insulation, or small flies living in dirty drains, or fruit flies on that one potato all the way in the bottom of the bag in the back of the drawer.
It’s not hopeless though. Having a solid preventative plan in place and knowing what to look for, how to look, and where to look can help minimize large infestations. Catching these issues when they are still small means they can be contained and treated faster and more effectively. Have you been dealing with a tough issue? Want to know more about implementing preventative plans? Contact us here!
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