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How Flooding can affect Pest Populations
Home :: Home :: Home Improvement
By: Stephanie Larkin Email Article
Word Count: 832 Digg it | Del.icio.us it | Google it | StumbleUpon it

  

Floods can be hazardous to human and animal lives and cause extensive, costly damage to land and property. As delightful as it to think that flooding at least rids us of unwanted pests in and around our homes, the opposite is true.

There are many pests that breed and thrive in flooded areas. They often use the excessive moisture provided by flooding along the banks of rivers and lakes and small pools of standing water to lay eggs in, and to incubate large colonies of larvae until they hatch.

Some pests don't like living in flooded areas, but they are quite resilient, and even intelligent in their ability to mobilize in rapid fashion and move away from threats such as flooding. Ants for example can relocate a whole colony to a dryer area in mere hours. They are especially adept at making themselves at home- inside your home.

Rats, mice and other pests are active year round although we don't always notice their population growths and activities as much in colder months. Hordes of insects and pests like mosquitoes, ants, beetles, lady bugs, crickets, bees, and others will be on the move in search of food, and more noticeable in the warmer months of spring and summer.

Act Now to Combat Future Pest Invasions

It has been an especially wet fall and winter season with many areas of the country experiencing flooding thus far, and spring rains are almost now upon us. We can expect there to be an overabundant amount of a variety of pests to content with as our temperatures heat up. You need to begin looking for and eliminating those things in and around your home that attract pests now, before they are able to invade.

Taking steps now to protect against an invasion of pests offers you the best chance to keep them in check so that they can't pester you and your family. It can be quite costly and extremely difficult to combat and eliminate pests once they have already invaded your property and home. Pesticides can also be hazardous to the health of family and pets when used in large quantities to combat an existing large population of pests.

Given the opportunity, pests can build multiple tunnels and escape routes that can be hard to find and eliminate every one of, in order to kill off an entire colony of pests. Pests can also hide themselves away in hard to reach areas in and around your home. The pests that remain even after you have used pesticides, traps, and other tools to kill them off after an invasion, will continue breeding and rebuilding their numbers.

You can make your yard and home less attractive to pests. Purchase items that are designed to repel pests and check them regularly to ensure that they are still functioning properly. Consider having your home and yard treated annually by an exterminator to stop pests from invading. Get rid of or make repairs to the things in and around your home that attract pest invasions and enable explosions in pest populations.

Fill holes in your yard with dirt or rocks so rainwater cannot collect in them and create appealing nurseries for pests. Trash cans should have locking lids to keep water, rodents, and pests out of them. Empty bird baths daily to keep any water in them from becoming stagnate and attracting pests. Clear away yard debris to eliminate the perfect habitat for many pests.

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Stephanie Larkin is a freelance writer who writes about large businesses for home owners such as Orkin and Terminix

Article Source: http://www.ArticleBiz.com

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