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Cockroaches are one of the most common insect pests in houses and apartment buildings. They are also one of the most hated. Who wouldnt cringe at the sight of dozens of roaches quickly scurrying away when a light is turned on in the kitchen? And our distaste is well-founded. Cockroaches carry and spread a number of health problems. Find out more, including effective roach pest control measures.

About Roaches

What we think of as the common cockroach actually comprises a number of different insect species. There is even a kind called periplaneta Americana, or the American cockroach -- a misnomer, since this kind of roach is to be found worldwide. Depending on their type, adult roaches may range in size from 10-40 mm, or approximately 1/3 to 1 1/2inch.

Roaches are active mainly at night, when they tend to have free run of your kitchen. During the day, they prefer to hide, preferably in warm moist spaces, but they will take up residence in cracks in your bathroom wall, your home heating system, electrical appliances, and more. If you live in an apartment, they will move freely among the neighbors in your building.

Cockroaches arent overly picky eaters. Though their favorite foods are full of starch and sugar (think pastries and candy), they also enjoy such delicacies as cardboard, shoe soles, blood and sputum, and the dead or weak from among their own kind.

Why Roaches Are Dangerous

Roaches arent considered pests just because of their yuck factor. Via their gland secretions and their vomit (eeww!!) they give off an unpleasant odor that is extremely hard to get out of your home. They can also damage household possessions ranging from upholstered furniture to hardbound books.

Worse than those unpleasant habits, though, is their infamous calling card. In their wake, roaches leave feces and partially digested food. Because they eat garbage and human waste, they pick up disease organisms and parasitic worms. They then spread these by means of the digestive fluids which they leave behind on foods they have nibbled. Whats more, they transfer additional microbes via the numerous hairs on their bodies.

As well as causing allergic reactions including skin conditions and respiratory problems, roaches are known to carry dangerous diseases such as cholera, diarrhea, dysentery, leprosy, plague, polio, and typhoid fever.

Originally posted here:
Make roach pest control a priority

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February 17, 2015 at 8:33 pm by Mr HomeBuilder
Category: Pest Control