Pest Control Phoenix
Has this ever happened to you? You reach up into the cabinet for some cornmeal or flour that you have had stored there but have not used for a while, take it down and open it as you prepare a recipe. All of a sudden, you notice moving spots in the flour. You might have an infestation of what are commonly called pantry pests: Flour Beetles, Granary Weevils, or Meal Moths. If this is the situation you face, you can turn to Phoenix Pest Control providers to help get the pests under control. Companies offering Phoenix Pest Control also serve nearby Ahwatukee, Chandler, Gilbert, and Tempe as well as the Phoenix Metro area.
You also want, in addition to the pest problem ceasing to exist, a relatively safe method of pest extermination, so that you, your family and pets are not adversely affected. Quality Phoenix Pest Control consultants utilize a pest management system called IPM, or Integrated Pest Management and for more information please visit Pest Control Phoenix.
Integrated Pest Management utilizes the least toxic and least invasive methods for removing pests first, using a multi-front plan of attack. Service providers will come to your home and make a positive identification of the pest in question, because knowing which pest it is allows Phoenix Pest Control technicians to utilize the appropriate method for pest removal based on the pest’s life cycle. Certain methods are best applied when a pest is in the egg stage, and may be completely ineffective if the pest is at a larval or adult stage, for an example, so you must know with certainty what the pest is in order to get rid of it.
Mechanical controls are also used at various stages of pest removal. After the pests are eliminated from inside a home or office, you want to keep them out. One way Phoenix Pest Control technicians do that is to erect barriers outside the home, around the foundation, so that new pests will not be able to enter. In many cases, this can solve the problem of too many pests. If, however, it does not, Phoenix Pest Control technicians move up the ladder to methods that may finally include chemical pesticides if less toxic methods of pest removal do not succeed.






