Initial Mice - Crickets - Spider 732-698-8387 Bed Bug and Insect Exterminating (Middlesex - Somerset - Union Counties New Jersey)
See Details about our Special deal at https://eliminexnj.com/89promo
Basic Insect Pest Prices Starting at $179 without an extended service agreement
Eliminex Exterminators are Accredited Better Business A+
We are NJ State Licensed and Insured by DEPE and Wildlife Control #97469A
Real Estate Certificate for Termite Inspection $145 for central NJ
Can get a Free Instant Bed Bug, Insect and House Mouse Treatment Quote at
https://eliminexnj.com
732-698-8387
See our job documentation www.instagram.com/eliminex.nj
Eco-Smart Green natural Rodent and Insect Control Line of Service Options available
Average sized home under 2200 sf for a Termite Treatment starting at $565 (home with no garage) on up
Insect Treatments & Rodent Services Starting from 60 / 90 day warranties and 1 year agreements
Wildlife Removal starting at Trapping / 1 Way Install for unlimited Trapping. Damage Repairs and Warranty offered
We also Provide Year Round Service for General Insect Pests and Rodents with a low payment plan
Squirrel Trapping and Removal with Repairs comes with option of 60 / 90 / 180 Day and 1 / 2 Year Warranties
Wildlife Trapping Starting at $445 for 1 week unlimited
Bed Bug Treatment special we are promoting is the 2nd Room for $175 ONE ROOM OPTION Negotiable. Comes with a Free 30 day Follow up treatment. Call for details
Attic Cleanup Decontamination is also available after trapping starting at a minimum of 100 square foot area.
What are House Mice?
The house mouse is the most commonly encountered and economically important of the commensal rodents. House mice are of Central Asian origin, but they are distributed worldwide and can be found throughout the United States. House mice are not only a nuisance, but they can pose significant health and property threats.
House mice breed rapidly and can adapt quickly to changing conditions. In fact, a female house mouse can give birth to a half dozen babies every three weeks and can produce up to 35 young per year.
Eastern Grey Squirrels commonly enter houses either by chewing holes along the facia or in dormer corners, or by entering any existing gaps 1-2 inches in diameter. Once inside they may chew on electrical wiring or phone lines, displace or pack down and soil insulation, and make noise with their activities. The best way to rid squirrel problems is to first remove the problem squirrels by trapping and relocating and then patching holes to prevent further problems. Trimming any trees away from the house is also a good idea.
Squirrels occasionally damage lawns by burying or searching for and digging up nuts . They will chew bark and clip twigs on ornamental trees or shrubbery planted in yards. Often squirrels take food at bird feeders. Sometimes they chew to enlarge openings of bird houses and they enter to eat nestling songbirds. Flying squirrels are small enough to enter most bird houses and are especially likely to eat nesting birds.
Traditionally, raccoons prefer heavily wooded areas with access to trees, water and abundant vegetation. There, they make their dens in the hollow parts of trees as well as abandoned burrows, traveling up to 18 miles to forage for food.
Raccoons are extremely adaptable. They are often found in suburban and urban areas, making their homes in man-made structures like attics, sewers, barns and sheds. In urban areas, raccoons tend to stay closer to their dens with a range of only about 1 mile, depending on their age and sex.
Activity: Nocturnal in nature, raccoons are mostly active at nighttime. They are most active in spring, summer and fall, and will sleep in their dens for most of the winter.
Reproduction: Reproduction begins in late winter. Females, or sows, usually give birth to 1-6 baby kits in April or May. Mothers are very protective of their young until they separate after about a year.
Social Interaction: Raccoons are independent after 12-14 months of age. Adults live in loose knit communities of 4 - 5 raccoons for better protection against predators.
Communication: Raccoons communicate with each other using over 200 different sounds and 12-15 different calls.
Skills: Raccoons possess amazing dexterity that gives them the ability to open doors, jars, bottles and latches. They are also great climbers, which allows them to better access food and shelter.
Pantry pests
The red flour beetle, Tribolium castaneum, attacks stored grain products worldwide.
Insect pests including the Mediterranean flour moth, the Indian mealmoth, the cigarette beetle, the drugstore beetle, the confused flour beetle, the red flour beetle, the merchant grain beetle, the sawtoothed grain beetle, the wheat weevil, the maize weevil and the rice weevil infest stored dry foods such as flour, cereals and pasta.
In the home, foodstuffs found to be infested are usually discarded, and storing such products in sealed containers should prevent the problem from reoccurring. The eggs of these insects are likely to go unnoticed, with the larvae being the destructive life stage, and the adult the most noticeable stage. Since pesticides are not safe to use near food, alternative treatments such as freezing for four days at 0 °F (−18 °C) or baking for half an hour at 130 °F (54 °C) should kill any insects present.
Clothes moths
Larva, pupa and adult clothes moth Tineola bisselliella with characteristic damage to fabric
The larvae of clothes moths (mainly Tineola bisselliella and Tinea pellionella) feed on fabrics and carpets, particularly those that are stored or soiled. The adult females lay batches of eggs on natural fibres, including wool, silk and fur, as well as cotton and linen in blends. The developing larvae spin protective webbing and chew into the fabric, creating holes and specks of excrement. Damage is often concentrated in concealed locations, under collars and near seams of clothing, in folds and crevices in upholstery and round the edges of carpets as well as under furniture. Methods of control include using airtight containers for storage, periodic laundering of garments, trapping, freezing, heating and the use of chemicals; mothballs contain volatile insect repellents such as 1,4-Dichlorobenzene which deter adults, but to kill the larvae, permethrin, pyrethroids or other insecticides may need to be used.
Carpet beetles
Carpet beetles are members of the family Dermestidae, and while the adult beetles feed on nectar and pollen, the larvae are destructive pests in homes, warehouses and museums. They feed on animal products including wool, silk, leather, fur, the bristles of hair brushes, pet hair, feathers and museum specimens. They tend to infest hidden locations and may feed on larger areas of fabrics than do clothes moths, leaving behind specks of excrement and brown, hollow, bristly-looking cast skins. Management of infestations is difficult and is based on exclusion and sanitation where possible, resorting to pesticides when necessary. The beetles can fly in from outdoors and the larvae can survive on lint fragments, dust and inside the bags of vacuum cleaners. In warehouses and museums, sticky traps baited with suitable pheromones can be used to identify problems, and heating, freezing, spraying the surface with insecticide and fumigation will kill the insects when suitably applied. Susceptible items can be protected from attack by keeping them in clean airtight containers.
Bookworms
Books are sometimes attacked by cockroaches, silverfish, book mites, booklice, and various beetles which feed on the covers, paper, bindings and glue. They leave behind physical damage in the form of tiny holes as well as staining from their faeces. Book pests include the larder beetle, and the larvae of the black carpet beetle and the drugstore beetle which attack leather-bound books, while the common clothes moth and the brown house moth attack cloth bindings. These attacks are largely a problem with historic books, because modern bookbinding materials are less susceptible to this type of damage.
Evidence of attack may be found in the form of tiny piles of book-dust and specks of frass. Damage may be concentrated in the spine, the projecting edges of pages and the cover. Prevention of attack relies on keeping books in cool, clean, dry positions with low humidity, and occasional inspections should be made. Treatment can be by freezing for lengthy periods, but some insect eggs are very resistant and can survive for long periods at low temperatures.
Beetles
House timber split open to reveal larvae of the house longhorn beetle, Hylotrupes bajulus, in their burrows, which are partially filled with frass
Various beetles in the Bostrichoidea superfamily attack the dry, seasoned wood used as structural timber in houses and to make furniture. In most cases, it is the larvae that do the damage; these are invisible from the outside of the timber, but are chewing away at the wood in the interior of the item. Examples of these are the powderpost beetles, which attack the sapwood of hardwoods, and the furniture beetles, which attacks softwoods, including plywood. The damage has already been done by the time the adult beetles bore their way out, leaving neat round holes behind them. The first that a householder knows about the beetle damage is often when a chair leg breaks off or a piece of structural timber caves in. Prevention is through chemical treatment of the timber prior to its use in construction or in furniture manufacture.
Termites
Termites with colonies in close proximity to houses can extend their galleries underground and make mud tubes to enter homes. The insects keep out of sight and chew their way through structural and decorative timbers, leaving the surface layers intact, as well as through cardboard, plastic and insulation materials. Their presence may become apparent when winged insects appear and swarm in the home in spring. Regular inspection of structures by a trained professional may help detect termite activity before damage becomes substantial.;[56] Inspection and monitoring of termites is important because termite alates (winged reproductives) may not always swarm inside a structure. Control and extermination is a professional job involving trying to exclude the insects from the building and trying to kill those already present. Soil-applied liquid termiticides provide a chemical barrier that prevents termites from entering buildings, and lethal baits can be used; these are eaten by foraging insects, and carried back to the nest and shared with other members of the colony, which goes into slow decline.
Mosquitoes
Mosquito (Aedes aegypti) biting a human
Mosquitoes are midge-like flies in the family Culicidae. Females of most species feed on blood and some act as vectors for malaria and other diseases. Historically they have been controlled by use of DDT and other chemical means, but since the adverse environmental effects of these insecticides has been realised, other means of control have been attempted. The insects rely on water in which to breed and the first line of control is to reduce possible breeding locations by draining marshes and reducing accumulations of standing water. Other approaches include biological control of larvae by the use of fish or other predators, genetic control, the introduction of pathogens, growth-regulating hormones, the release of pheromones and mosquito trapping
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Termite Inspections, Bed Bug Removal, Rodent Removal NJ, Extermination NJ, Spraying for Carpenter Ants NJ, Carpenter Bees, Yellow Jackets NJ, Bald Faced Hornets NJ, Millipede, Earwig, Fleas, Silverfish, Ticks, Wasps, Carpet Beetles, Pill Bug, Stink Bug NJ, Ants, Termites NJ, Bed Bugs NJ Animal Extraction and Exclusion of Squirrels, Installing One Ways and Trapping of Squirrels, Bats, Small Brown Bat, Big Brown Bats NJ, Raccoons, and more. Termite and Bed Bug Specialist for New Jersey includes Avenel NJ, Pest Control Manville NJ, Pest Control Cliffwood NJ, Pest Control Colonia NJ, Pest Control Cranbury NJ, Pest Control Dayton NJ, Pest Control Dunellen NJ, Pest Control Fords NJ, Pest Control Helmetta NJ, Pest Control Jamesburg NJ, Pest Control Franklin NJ, Pest Control Morganville NJ, Pest Control Middlesex NJ, Pest Control Monmouth Junction NJ, Pest Control Princeton NJ, Pest Control Parlin NJ, Pest Control Perth Amboy NJ, Pest Control Piscataway NJ, Pest Control Plainsboro NJ, Pest Control Port Reading NJ, Pest Control Sayreville NJ, Pest Control Sewaren NJ, Pest Control South Amboy NJ, Pest Control Carteret NJ, Pest Control South Plainfield NJ, Pest Control Belle Mead NJ
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Bed Bug Control
Termite Extermination
Mice Removal
Ants in the Kitchen
Tick Spraying in Yard
Flea Spraying
Cockroach control
Mice Exterminating
Bed Bug Infestation of Mattress
Spider Control
Cockroach Treatments NJ
See Details about our Special deal at https://eliminexnj.com/89promo
Basic Insect Pest Prices Starting at $179 without an extended service agreement
Eliminex Exterminators are Accredited Better Business A+
We are NJ State Licensed and Insured by DEPE and Wildlife Control #97469A
Real Estate Certificate for Termite Inspection $145 for central NJ
Can get a Free Instant Bed Bug, Insect and House Mouse Treatment Quote at
https://eliminexnj.com
732-698-8387
See our job documentation www.instagram.com/eliminex.nj
Eco-Smart Green natural Rodent and Insect Control Line of Service Options available
Average sized home under 2200 sf for a Termite Treatment starting at $565 (home with no garage) on up
Insect Treatments & Rodent Services Starting from 60 / 90 day warranties and 1 year agreements
Wildlife Removal starting at Trapping / 1 Way Install for unlimited Trapping. Damage Repairs and Warranty offered
We also Provide Year Round Service for General Insect Pests and Rodents with a low payment plan
Squirrel Trapping and Removal with Repairs comes with option of 60 / 90 / 180 Day and 1 / 2 Year Warranties
Wildlife Trapping Starting at $445 for 1 week unlimited
Bed Bug Treatment special we are promoting is the 2nd Room for $175 ONE ROOM OPTION Negotiable. Comes with a Free 30 day Follow up treatment. Call for details
Attic Cleanup Decontamination is also available after trapping starting at a minimum of 100 square foot area.
What are House Mice?
The house mouse is the most commonly encountered and economically important of the commensal rodents. House mice are of Central Asian origin, but they are distributed worldwide and can be found throughout the United States. House mice are not only a nuisance, but they can pose significant health and property threats.
House mice breed rapidly and can adapt quickly to changing conditions. In fact, a female house mouse can give birth to a half dozen babies every three weeks and can produce up to 35 young per year.
Eastern Grey Squirrels commonly enter houses either by chewing holes along the facia or in dormer corners, or by entering any existing gaps 1-2 inches in diameter. Once inside they may chew on electrical wiring or phone lines, displace or pack down and soil insulation, and make noise with their activities. The best way to rid squirrel problems is to first remove the problem squirrels by trapping and relocating and then patching holes to prevent further problems. Trimming any trees away from the house is also a good idea.
Squirrels occasionally damage lawns by burying or searching for and digging up nuts . They will chew bark and clip twigs on ornamental trees or shrubbery planted in yards. Often squirrels take food at bird feeders. Sometimes they chew to enlarge openings of bird houses and they enter to eat nestling songbirds. Flying squirrels are small enough to enter most bird houses and are especially likely to eat nesting birds.
Traditionally, raccoons prefer heavily wooded areas with access to trees, water and abundant vegetation. There, they make their dens in the hollow parts of trees as well as abandoned burrows, traveling up to 18 miles to forage for food.
Raccoons are extremely adaptable. They are often found in suburban and urban areas, making their homes in man-made structures like attics, sewers, barns and sheds. In urban areas, raccoons tend to stay closer to their dens with a range of only about 1 mile, depending on their age and sex.
Activity: Nocturnal in nature, raccoons are mostly active at nighttime. They are most active in spring, summer and fall, and will sleep in their dens for most of the winter.
Reproduction: Reproduction begins in late winter. Females, or sows, usually give birth to 1-6 baby kits in April or May. Mothers are very protective of their young until they separate after about a year.
Social Interaction: Raccoons are independent after 12-14 months of age. Adults live in loose knit communities of 4 - 5 raccoons for better protection against predators.
Communication: Raccoons communicate with each other using over 200 different sounds and 12-15 different calls.
Skills: Raccoons possess amazing dexterity that gives them the ability to open doors, jars, bottles and latches. They are also great climbers, which allows them to better access food and shelter.
Pantry pests
The red flour beetle, Tribolium castaneum, attacks stored grain products worldwide.
Insect pests including the Mediterranean flour moth, the Indian mealmoth, the cigarette beetle, the drugstore beetle, the confused flour beetle, the red flour beetle, the merchant grain beetle, the sawtoothed grain beetle, the wheat weevil, the maize weevil and the rice weevil infest stored dry foods such as flour, cereals and pasta.
In the home, foodstuffs found to be infested are usually discarded, and storing such products in sealed containers should prevent the problem from reoccurring. The eggs of these insects are likely to go unnoticed, with the larvae being the destructive life stage, and the adult the most noticeable stage. Since pesticides are not safe to use near food, alternative treatments such as freezing for four days at 0 °F (−18 °C) or baking for half an hour at 130 °F (54 °C) should kill any insects present.
Clothes moths
Larva, pupa and adult clothes moth Tineola bisselliella with characteristic damage to fabric
The larvae of clothes moths (mainly Tineola bisselliella and Tinea pellionella) feed on fabrics and carpets, particularly those that are stored or soiled. The adult females lay batches of eggs on natural fibres, including wool, silk and fur, as well as cotton and linen in blends. The developing larvae spin protective webbing and chew into the fabric, creating holes and specks of excrement. Damage is often concentrated in concealed locations, under collars and near seams of clothing, in folds and crevices in upholstery and round the edges of carpets as well as under furniture. Methods of control include using airtight containers for storage, periodic laundering of garments, trapping, freezing, heating and the use of chemicals; mothballs contain volatile insect repellents such as 1,4-Dichlorobenzene which deter adults, but to kill the larvae, permethrin, pyrethroids or other insecticides may need to be used.
Carpet beetles
Carpet beetles are members of the family Dermestidae, and while the adult beetles feed on nectar and pollen, the larvae are destructive pests in homes, warehouses and museums. They feed on animal products including wool, silk, leather, fur, the bristles of hair brushes, pet hair, feathers and museum specimens. They tend to infest hidden locations and may feed on larger areas of fabrics than do clothes moths, leaving behind specks of excrement and brown, hollow, bristly-looking cast skins. Management of infestations is difficult and is based on exclusion and sanitation where possible, resorting to pesticides when necessary. The beetles can fly in from outdoors and the larvae can survive on lint fragments, dust and inside the bags of vacuum cleaners. In warehouses and museums, sticky traps baited with suitable pheromones can be used to identify problems, and heating, freezing, spraying the surface with insecticide and fumigation will kill the insects when suitably applied. Susceptible items can be protected from attack by keeping them in clean airtight containers.
Bookworms
Books are sometimes attacked by cockroaches, silverfish, book mites, booklice, and various beetles which feed on the covers, paper, bindings and glue. They leave behind physical damage in the form of tiny holes as well as staining from their faeces. Book pests include the larder beetle, and the larvae of the black carpet beetle and the drugstore beetle which attack leather-bound books, while the common clothes moth and the brown house moth attack cloth bindings. These attacks are largely a problem with historic books, because modern bookbinding materials are less susceptible to this type of damage.
Evidence of attack may be found in the form of tiny piles of book-dust and specks of frass. Damage may be concentrated in the spine, the projecting edges of pages and the cover. Prevention of attack relies on keeping books in cool, clean, dry positions with low humidity, and occasional inspections should be made. Treatment can be by freezing for lengthy periods, but some insect eggs are very resistant and can survive for long periods at low temperatures.
Beetles
House timber split open to reveal larvae of the house longhorn beetle, Hylotrupes bajulus, in their burrows, which are partially filled with frass
Various beetles in the Bostrichoidea superfamily attack the dry, seasoned wood used as structural timber in houses and to make furniture. In most cases, it is the larvae that do the damage; these are invisible from the outside of the timber, but are chewing away at the wood in the interior of the item. Examples of these are the powderpost beetles, which attack the sapwood of hardwoods, and the furniture beetles, which attacks softwoods, including plywood. The damage has already been done by the time the adult beetles bore their way out, leaving neat round holes behind them. The first that a householder knows about the beetle damage is often when a chair leg breaks off or a piece of structural timber caves in. Prevention is through chemical treatment of the timber prior to its use in construction or in furniture manufacture.
Termites
Termites with colonies in close proximity to houses can extend their galleries underground and make mud tubes to enter homes. The insects keep out of sight and chew their way through structural and decorative timbers, leaving the surface layers intact, as well as through cardboard, plastic and insulation materials. Their presence may become apparent when winged insects appear and swarm in the home in spring. Regular inspection of structures by a trained professional may help detect termite activity before damage becomes substantial.;[56] Inspection and monitoring of termites is important because termite alates (winged reproductives) may not always swarm inside a structure. Control and extermination is a professional job involving trying to exclude the insects from the building and trying to kill those already present. Soil-applied liquid termiticides provide a chemical barrier that prevents termites from entering buildings, and lethal baits can be used; these are eaten by foraging insects, and carried back to the nest and shared with other members of the colony, which goes into slow decline.
Mosquitoes
Mosquito (Aedes aegypti) biting a human
Mosquitoes are midge-like flies in the family Culicidae. Females of most species feed on blood and some act as vectors for malaria and other diseases. Historically they have been controlled by use of DDT and other chemical means, but since the adverse environmental effects of these insecticides has been realised, other means of control have been attempted. The insects rely on water in which to breed and the first line of control is to reduce possible breeding locations by draining marshes and reducing accumulations of standing water. Other approaches include biological control of larvae by the use of fish or other predators, genetic control, the introduction of pathogens, growth-regulating hormones, the release of pheromones and mosquito trapping
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Termite Inspections, Bed Bug Removal, Rodent Removal NJ, Extermination NJ, Spraying for Carpenter Ants NJ, Carpenter Bees, Yellow Jackets NJ, Bald Faced Hornets NJ, Millipede, Earwig, Fleas, Silverfish, Ticks, Wasps, Carpet Beetles, Pill Bug, Stink Bug NJ, Ants, Termites NJ, Bed Bugs NJ Animal Extraction and Exclusion of Squirrels, Installing One Ways and Trapping of Squirrels, Bats, Small Brown Bat, Big Brown Bats NJ, Raccoons, and more. Termite and Bed Bug Specialist for New Jersey includes Avenel NJ, Pest Control Manville NJ, Pest Control Cliffwood NJ, Pest Control Colonia NJ, Pest Control Cranbury NJ, Pest Control Dayton NJ, Pest Control Dunellen NJ, Pest Control Fords NJ, Pest Control Helmetta NJ, Pest Control Jamesburg NJ, Pest Control Franklin NJ, Pest Control Morganville NJ, Pest Control Middlesex NJ, Pest Control Monmouth Junction NJ, Pest Control Princeton NJ, Pest Control Parlin NJ, Pest Control Perth Amboy NJ, Pest Control Piscataway NJ, Pest Control Plainsboro NJ, Pest Control Port Reading NJ, Pest Control Sayreville NJ, Pest Control Sewaren NJ, Pest Control South Amboy NJ, Pest Control Carteret NJ, Pest Control South Plainfield NJ, Pest Control Belle Mead NJ
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Bed Bug Control
Termite Extermination
Mice Removal
Ants in the Kitchen
Tick Spraying in Yard
Flea Spraying
Cockroach control
Mice Exterminating
Bed Bug Infestation of Mattress
Spider Control
Cockroach Treatments NJ
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