NPMA ePestWorld

National Pest Management Association

Heard From the Hill
News From National
NAPROCO LLC dba Garden Girls Repellents
Crawlspace Depot
Crawlspace Depot®
DON’T WORK IN THE DARK!
While cramped spaces and unusual configurations can make setting up lighting in a crawl space a hassle, you can’t work in the dark! Our durable LED lights are the perfect solution. Spaced 10’ apart on a 50’ cord, these five LED lights produce 7000 lumens and use just 50 watts, with an LED life of 50,000 hours. Each light includes an attached carabiner to make installation quick and easy.
Learn more
Advertisement
New Members
UPG Unified Purchasing Group
Member Benefit Highlight
QualityPro
NPMA Education and Events
Members Make Headlines
FieldRoutes
Weekly Headlines
Manchester Times
To kick off 2023, the National Pest Management Association (NPMA) is warning Americans about the top three pests that will be a continued concern this year: rodents, ticks and bed bugs.

Visit https://www.manchestertimes.com/news/business/eek-they-re-back-npma-reveals-top-pest-concerns-for-2023/article_c040f5c5-1f40-5606-a3a7-d99fc9e593d8.html to view the full article online.

Yahoo! News
With January rain totals well above normal across the Southeast, it is a good time to take inventory of where standing water is holding and what can be done to eliminate it.

Visit http://bit.ly/3Yr0zED to view the full article online.

Entomology Today
Sibling rivalry takes a grim turn in the parasitoid wasp species Isodontia harmandi, as larvae commonly cannibalize their nest mates.

Visit https://entomologytoday.org/2023/01/31/larvae-wasp-eat-siblings-cannibal-isodontia-harmandi/ to view the full article online.

Turn to 23
Scorned by an ex? For $10 this Valentine’s season, you can name a cockroach after your former lover and the San Antonio Zoo will feed the grimy insect to one of its animals.

Visit https://www.turnto23.com/san-antonio-zoo-will-name-cockroach-after-your-ex-valentines-day to view the full article online.

AP News
The population of western monarch butterflies wintering along the California coast has rebounded for a second year in a row after a precipitous drop in 2020, but the population of orange-and-black insects is still well below what it used to be, researchers announced Tuesday.

Visit https://apnews.com/article/science-california-climate-and-environment-butterflies-7327c96f182c872f3ed15134b6b1b48f to view the full article online.