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TERMITES - ANTS - SPIDERS - RODENTS - MICE - RATS - ROACHES -
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CRICKETS - EARWIGS - SILVERFISH
- BED BUGS - SNAILS
- SLUGS - CARPET BEATLE - FLEAS
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RESIDENTIAL and FUMIGATIONS
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of California, PCOC.ORG
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Serving: Orange
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Pest Control
ORANGE COUNTY
ARTICLES
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PEST CONTROL
ORANGE COUNTY .COM
1115 E. Kimberly Avenue
Laguna Hills, CA 92653
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Orange County
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- Ontario, CA
Our
Customers call us from the Orange County zipcodes and cities:
Anaheim, 92801, 92802, 92803, 92804, 92805, 92806, 92807, 92808,
92809, 92812, 92814, 92815, 92816, 92817, 92825, 92850, 92899,
Brea, 92821, 92822, 92823, Buena Park, 90620, 90621, 90622, 90623,
90624, Costa Mesa, 92626, 92627, 92628, Cypress, 90630, Fountain
Valley, 92708, 92728, Fullerton, 92831, 92832, 92833, 92834, 92835,
92836, 92837, 92838, Garden Grove, 92840, 92841, 92842, 92843,
92844, 92845, 92846, Huntington Beach 92605, 92615, 92646, 92647,
92648, 92649, Irvine, 92602, 92603, 92604, 92606, 92612, 92614,
92616, 92618, 92619, 92620, 92623, 92650, 92697, 92709, 92710,
La Habra, 90631, 90632, 90633, La Palma, 90623, Los Alamitos,
90720, 90721, Orange, 92856, 92857, 92859, 92861, 92862, 92863,
92864, 92865, 92866, 92867, 92868, 92869, Placentia 92870, 92871,
Santa Ana, 92701, 92702, 92703, 92704, 92705, 92706, 92707, 92708,
92711, 92712, 92725, 92728, 92735, 92799, Seal Beach, 90740, Stanton,
90680, Tusin, 92780, 92781, 92782, Villa Park, 92861, 92867, Westminister,
92683, 92684, 92685, Yorba Linda, 92885, 92886, 92887,Aliso Viejo,
92653, 92656, 92698, Dana Point, 92624, 92629,Laguna Beach, 92607,
92637, 92651, 92652, 92653, 92654, 92656, 92677, 92698, Laguna
Hills, 92637, 92653, 92654, 92656, Laguna Niguel, 92607, 92677,
Laguna Woods, 92653, 92654, Lake Forest, 92609, 92630, Mission
Viejo, 92675, 92690, 92691, 92692, 92694, Newport Beach, 92657,
92658, 92659, 92660, 92661, 92662, 92663, Rancho Santa Margarita,
92688, San Clemente, 92672, 92673, 92674, San Juan Capistrano,
92675, 92690, 92691, 92692, 92693, 92694, Ladera Ra,nch, 92694,
Coto De Caza 92679 Anaheim Hills, 92807, 92808, 92809, 92817,
Dove Canyon, 92679, Coto De Caza, 92679, Newport Coast, 92657,
Corona Del Mar, 92625, El Modena, Las Flores, Midway City, Orange
Park Acres, Rossmoor, Silverado Canyon, Sunset Beach, Surfside,
Trabuco Canyon, Talega, Tustin Foothills
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GLOSSARY OF PEST CONTROL TERMS:
TERMS
THE PEST CONTROL INDUSTRY USES TO
DESCRIBE WHAT THEY DO AND THE PROBLEMS THEY ENCOUNTER
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GLOSSARY
OF PEST CONTROL TERMS
Glossary
Abdomen:
The last of the three major body divisions of an insect.
Action
threshold: The pest density at which a control tactic
must be implemented to avoid an economic loss.
Active
ingredient (AI): The component of a pesticide formulation
responsible for the toxic effect.
Agroecosystem:
A relatively artificial ecosystem in an agricultural field,
pasture, or orchard.
Antenna,
Antennae (pl.): A pair of sensory organs located on
the head of an insect, above the mouthparts.
Aorta:
The front-most, non-pulsating portion of the dorsal blood
vessel of an insect.
Arthropod:
Any of the invertebrate animals (such as insects, spiders,
or crustaceans) having an exoskeleton, a segmented body
and jointed limbs.
Augmentation:
Biological control practices intended to increase the
number or effectiveness of existing natural enemies.
Bacterium: A single-celled microscopic plant-like
organism that does not produce chlorophyll.
Beak:
Colloquial expression for the protruding mouthpart structures
of a sucking insect (= proboscis).
Biological
control: The use of living organisms, such as predators,
parasitoids, and pathogens, to control pest insects, weeds,
or diseases. Typically involves some human activity.
Biorational:
Having a minimal disruptive influence upon the environment
and its inhabitants (e.g., a biorational insecticide).
Broad-spectrum (insecticide): Active against a wide range
of insects.
Bt:
The bacterium, Bacillus thuringiensis.
Caterpillar:
The immature stage (larva) of a butterfly, moth, or sawfly.
Chemical
control:Pest management practices which rely upon
the application of synthetic or naturally-derived pesticides.
Class:
A category of the classification scheme of living organisms
ranking below a phylum and above an order (e.g., Insecta).
Classical
biological control: The importation of foreign natural
enemies to control previously introduced, or native, pests.
Cocoon:
A silken case formed by an insect larva for pupation.
Cole
crops: Crops such as cabbage, broccoli, Brussels sprouts,
and other crucifers.
Complete
metamorphosis: Type of insect development characterized
by four distinct stages: egg, larva, pupa, and adult.
Conservation:
Any biological control practice designed to protect and
maintain populations of existing natural enemies.
Contact
poison: A pesticide that is absorbed through the body
wall, as opposed to one that must be ingested.
Cucurbits:
Vine crops such as cucumbers, melons, squash, and pumpkins.
Cultural
control: Pest management practices that rely upon
manipulation of the cropping environment (e.g., cultivation
of weeds harboring insect pests).
Density
(insect populations): The number of insects per unit of
measure (e.g., beetles per square meter).
Diapause:
A physiological state of arrested metabolism, growth,
and development that occurs at a particular stage in the
life cycle of an organism.
Dormancy:
A recurring period in the life cycle of an organism when
growth, development, and reproduction are suppressed.
Ecology:
The study of an organism's interrelationship with its
environment.
Economic
threshold: see Action threshold.
Elytra:
The thickened or leathery front or forewings of insects
such as beetles.
Encapsulation:
The surrounding of an invading body, such as the egg of
a parasite, by insect hemocytes (blood cells) and the
formation of a protective capsule.
Entomopathogenic:
Insect-attacking organism.
Environmental
impact quotient (EIQ): A relative value that estimates
the environmental impact of a pesticide, by taking into
account toxicity to natural enemies, wildlife, and humans,
degree of exposure, aquatic and terrestrial effects, soil
chemistry, etc.
Epizootic: A disease outbreak within an insect population.
Exoskeleton:
A skeleton or supportive structure on the outside of an
insect body.
Exotic:
Introduced from another country or continent (e.g., introduced
insect pest).
Family:
A taxonomic subdivision of an order, containing a group
of related genera. Family names end in -idae.
Forewing:
The first or anterior pair of insect wings.
Fumigant:
A substance which produces a gas, vapor, fume, or smoke
intended to kill a pest.
Fungicide:
Any substance that kills or inhibits the growth of a fungus.
Funicle:
The portion of the flagellum of the antenna closest to
the club.
Fungus,
Fungi (pl.): Any of numerous plants lacking chlorophyll,
ranging in form from a single cell to a body of branched
filaments. Includes the yeasts, molds, smuts, and mushrooms.
Gene:
A biochemical unit of hereditary, often coding for an
entire protein.
Generalist:
A pest or natural enemy that can utilize a wide range
of species as host or prey.
Generation:
Period from any given stage in the life cycle to the same
life stage in the offspring. Typically from egg to egg.
Genetic
engineering: The manipulation of the genetic material
of an organism in order to achieve desirable characteristics.
Genus,
Genera (pl.): A group of evolutionarily related species,
sharing one or a number of characteristics.
Gradual
metamorphosis: A type of insect development in which
there is no prolonged resting stage (pupa). The three
stages are: egg, nymph, and adult.
GV:
Granulosis virus.
Habitat
manipulation: Manipulation of agricultural areas and
surrounding environment with the aim of conserving or
augmenting populations of natural enemies (e.g., the planting
of a refuge for natural enemies).
Head:
The anterior region of an insect, which bears the mouthparts,
eyes, antennae and houses the brain.
Herbicide:
A substance used to kill or control weeds.
Hermaphroditic:
Having both male and female sex organs in one individual.
Hindwings:
The second pair of wings of an insect.
Honeydew:
The sugary liquid discharge from the anus of certain insects
(Homoptera) such as aphids and scales.
Host:
The organism in or on which a parasitoid lives; a plant
on which an insect feeds.
Host
plant resistance: The relative amount of heritable
qualities possessed by a plant that reduces the degree
of damage to the plant by a pest or pests.
Hyperparasite:
A parasite whose host is another parasite.
Indigenous:
Native to an area.
Inoculative
release: The release of relatively small numbers of
natural enemies that are expected to colonize, reproduce,
and spread naturally throughout an area.
Insect
growth regulator (IGR): A substance, natural or synthetic,
that controls or modifies insect growth processes.
Insecticide
resistance: Genetically inherited ability to withstand
doses of pesticide which would kill individuals from strains
whose ancestors had not been exposed to the pesticide.
Insect
resistant (plants): Tolerant of, or resistant to,
insect attack (as in plants). individuals from strains
whose ancestors had not been exposed to the pesticide.
Instar:
The stage of an insect's life between successive molts,
for example the first instar is between hatching from
the egg and the first molt.
Integrated
pest management (IPM): An approach to the management
of pests in which all available control options, including
physical, chemical, and biological controls, are evaluated
and integrated into a unified program.
Integument:
The outer covering of the insect body that includes the
cuticle and the epidermis.
Introduction
(classical biological control): The importation of
a natural enemy from a foreign country or continent, usually
to control a pest also of foreign origin.
Inundative
release: The release of relatively large numbers of
natural enemies to suppress pest populations, without
the expectation that the natural enemies will colonize
and spread throughout the area.
Larva,
Larvae (pl.): The immature stage between the egg and
pupa of insects having complete metamorphosis where the
immature differs radically from the adult (e.g., caterpillars,
grubs).
Leafy
greens: Lettuces and other leaf vegetables.
Least
toxic: Having a minimal toxic effect upon non-target
organisms.
Life
Cycle: The sequence of events that occurs during the
lifetime of an individual organism.
Maggot:
The immature form (larva) of a fly or wasp, lacking legs
and a well-developed head.
Mass-reared:
Produced in large numbers, as in natural enemies produced
for release programs.
Mechanical
control: Control of pests by physical means such as
the use of screens or row covers.
Metabolism,
Metabolic: Chemical changes that occur in living cells
to provide energy for vital activities and to assimilate
new material.
Metamorphosis:
A change in body form during development of an insect.
Microbial:
A microscopic organism; a germ.
Microbial
insecticide: A preparation of microorganisms (e.g.,
viruses or bacteria) or their products used to suppress
insect pest populations.
Microsporidia:
Single-celled life forms, related to Protozoa.
Mite:
Any of several minute invertebrates belonging to the phylum
Arthropoda, class Arachnida.
Morphology:
Form or structure of an organism.
Multivoltine:
Having more than one brood or generation per season.
Mycelium,
Mycelia (pl.): A mass of interwoven filamentous 'threads'
that make up the vegetative part of a fungus.
Native
(insect or plant): Of local origin, not intentionally
or accidentally introduced.
Natural
control: The suppression of pest populations by naturally
occurring biological and environmental agents.
Natural
enemies: Living organisms found in nature that kill,
weaken, or reduce the reproductive potential of other
organisms.
Nectar:
The sugary liquid secreted by many flowers.
Nematode:
An elongated, cylindrical worm parasitic in animals, insects,
or plants, or free-living in soil or water.
NPV:
Nuclear polyhedrosis virus.
Nymph:
The immature stage, following hatching from the egg, of
an insect that does not have a pupal stage.
Ocelli:
Simple eyes on some adult and larval insects. Typically
there are three, which form an inverted triangle dorsally,
the function of which is obscure.
Order:
A taxonomic subdivision that contains groups of related
families or superfamilies; usually ending in -ptera in
insects.
Overwinter:
A period of rest or hibernation by which insects survive
the winter.
Oviposition:
The laying or depositing of eggs.
Ovipositor:
The egg-laying apparatus of a female insect.
Palp
(palpus): Sensory organ attached to insect mouthparts
that is used to test the quality of food.
Parasite:
An organism that lives in or on another organism (the
host) during some portion of its life cycle.
Parasitoid:
An animal that feeds in or on another living animal, consuming
all or most of its tissues and eventually killing it.
Parthenogenesis:
Development of an insect, from egg to adult, without fertilization.
Pathogen:
A disease-causing organism.
Pest:
An organism that interferes with human activities, property,
or health, or is objectionable.
Pest
management: see Integrated pest management.
Pesticide:
A substance that is used to kill, debilitate, or repel
a pest.
Pest-resistant
crops: Crops that possess attributes which minimize
damage by pests.
Phenology:
The seasonal life history of an insect population.
Pheromone:
A substance, such as a sex attractant, that is given off
by one individual and causes a specific reaction in other
individuals of the same species.
Phylum,
Phyla (pl.): One of the major divisions of the animal
kingdom.
Physical
Control: Control of pests by physical means such as
heat, cold, sound waves, etc.
Polyembryonic
(eggs): A single egg that divides to form two or more
(often hundreds) identical embryos.
Polyembryony:
Having several embryos.
Population:
A group of individuals of the same species within a given
space and time.
Predaceous:
Preying upon other organisms, predatory.
Predator:
An animal that attacks and feeds on other animals, normally
killing several individuals during its life cycle.
Pronotum:
The upper, often shield-like, hardened body-wall plate,
located just behind the head of an insect.
Protozoan:
A microscopic, single-celled organism that is largely
aquatic and includes many parasitic forms.
Pupa,
Pupae (pl.): The nonfeeding stage between the larva
and adult in insects with complete metamorphosis.
Puparium,
Puparia (pl.): A case formed by the hardening of the
last larval skin, in which the pupa is formed; usually
of flies.
Pupate:
To transform to a pupa.
Resistance
(insecticide or pesticide): see Insecticide resistance.
Resistance
(plant): see Host plant resistance.
Resurgence
(pest): The development of large populations of pests
that had previously been suppressed.
Sampling:
Estimating the density of organisms (pests or natural
enemies) or damage by examining a defined portion of the
crop.
Scouting,
Scout: see Sampling.
Septicemia:
Blood poisoning caused by pathogenic organisms.
Specialist:
A pest or natural enemy that utilizes a narrow range of
species for its host or prey.
Species:
A group of individuals similar in structure and capable
of interbreeding and producing fertile offspring. They
are different in structure from other such groups and
do not interbreed with them.
Spiracles:
The external openings of the insect breathing (tracheal)
system, found along the abdomen.
Spore:
A reproductive structure developing in certain bacteria
and fungi which is strongly resistant to environmental
influences but which will become active under suitable
conditions.
Stage
(life stage): A distinct period in the development of
an organism (e.g., for some insects, egg, larval, pupal,
and adult stages).
Stomach
poison: An insecticide that is lethal only after it
has been ingested by an insect, entering the insect body
through the gut.
Systemic
insecticide: An insecticide that is absorbed into
plant sap and is lethal to insects feeding on or within
the treated plant.
Thorax:
The insect body region behind the head which bears the
legs and wings.
Tolerance
(host-plant resistance): The ability of a plant to withstand
injury by pests.
Transformed
(Bt-transformed): Transfer and expression of a gene (e.g.,
for Bt toxin) into another organism.
Trap
crop: A small area of a crop used to divert pests
from a larger area of the same or another crop. The pests,
once diverted to the trap crop, may be treated with an
insecticide.
Univoltine:
Having only one brood or generation per season.
Vector:
An organism capable of carrying and transmitting a disease-causing
agent from one host to another.
Virus:
Any of various submicroscopic pathogens which can only
replicate inside a living cell.
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ABOUT ORANGE COUNTY CALIFORNIA:
Orange County is a county in Southern California, United States. Its
county seat is Santa Ana. According to the 2000 Census, its population
was 2,846,289, making it the second most populous county in the state
of California, and the fifth most populous in the United States. The
state of California estimates its population as of 2007 to be 3,098,121
people, dropping its rank to third, behind San Diego County. Thirty-four
incorporated cities are located in Orange County; the newest is Aliso
Viejo.
Unlike many other large centers of population in the United States,
Orange County uses its county name as its source of identification
whereas other places in the country are identified by the large city
that is closest to them. This is because there is no defined center
to Orange County like there is in other areas which have one distinct
large city. Five Orange County cities have populations exceeding 170,000
while no cities in the county have populations surpassing 360,000.
Seven of these cities are among the 200 largest cities in the United
States.
Orange County is also famous as a tourist destination, as the county
is home to such attractions as Disneyland and Knott's Berry Farm,
as well as sandy beaches for swimming and surfing, yacht harbors for
sailing and pleasure boating, and extensive area devoted to parks
and open space for golf, tennis, hiking, kayaking, cycling, skateboarding,
and other outdoor recreation. It is at the center of Southern California's
Tech Coast, with Irvine being the primary business hub.
The average price of a home in Orange County is $541,000. Orange County
is the home of a vast number of major industries and service organizations.
As an integral part of the second largest market in America, this
highly diversified region has become a Mecca for talented individuals
in virtually every field imaginable. Indeed the colorful pageant of
human history continues to unfold here; for perhaps in no other place
on earth is there an environment more conducive to innovative thinking,
creativity and growth than this exciting, sun bathed valley stretching
between the mountains and the sea in Orange County.
Orange County was Created March 11 1889, from part of Los Angeles
County, and, according to tradition, so named because of the flourishing
orange culture. Orange, however, was and is a commonplace name in
the United States, used originally in honor of the Prince of Orange,
son-in-law of King George II of England.
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Incorporated:
March 11, 1889
Legislative Districts:
* Congressional: 38th-40th, 42nd & 43
* California Senate: 31st-33rd, 35th & 37
* California Assembly: 58th, 64th, 67th, 69th, 72nd & 74
County Seat: Santa Ana
County Information:
Robert E. Thomas Hall of Administration
10 Civic Center Plaza, 3rd Floor, Santa Ana 92701
Telephone: (714)834-2345 Fax: (714)834-3098
County Government Website: http://www.oc.ca.gov |
CITIES OF ORANGE COUNTY CALIFORNIA:
City
of Aliso Viejo,
92653, 92656, 92698
City of Anaheim, 92801,
92802, 92803, 92804, 92805, 92806, 92807, 92808, 92809, 92812,
92814, 92815, 92816, 92817, 92825, 92850, 92899
City of Brea, 92821,
92822, 92823
City of Buena Park,
90620, 90621, 90622, 90623, 90624
City of Costa Mesa,
92626, 92627, 92628
City of Cypress,
90630
City of Dana Point,
92624, 92629
City of Fountain Valley,
92708, 92728
City of Fullerton,
92831, 92832, 92833, 92834, 92835, 92836, 92837, 92838
City of Garden Grove,
92840, 92841, 92842, 92843, 92844, 92845, 92846
City of Huntington
Beach, 92605, 92615, 92646, 92647, 92648, 92649
City of Irvine, 92602,
92603, 92604, 92606, 92612, 92614, 92616, 92618, 92619, 92620,
92623, 92650, 92697, 92709, 92710
City of La Habra,
90631, 90632, 90633
City of La Palma,
90623
City of Laguna Beach,
92607, 92637, 92651, 92652, 92653, 92654, 92656, 92677, 92698
City of Laguna Hills,
92637, 92653, 92654, 92656
City of Laguna
Niguel,
92607, 92677
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City
of Laguna Woods,
92653, 92654
City of Lake Forest,
92609, 92630, 92610
City of Los Alamitos,
90720, 90721
City of Mission Viejo,
92675, 92690, 92691, 92692, 92694
City of Newport
Beach, 92657, 92658, 92659, 92660, 92661, 92662, 92663
City of Orange, 92856,
92857, 92859, 92861, 92862, 92863, 92864, 92865, 92866, 92867,
92868, 92869
City of Placentia, 92870,
92871
City of Rancho Santa Margarita,
92688, 92679
City of San Clemente,
92672, 92673, 92674
City of San Juan
Capistrano, 92675, 92690, 92691, 92692, 92693, 92694
City of Santa Ana,
92701, 92702, 92703, 92704, 92705, 92706, 92707, 92708, 92711,
92712, 92725, 92728, 92735, 92799
City of Seal Beach,
90740
City of Stanton,
90680
City of Tustin, 92780,
92781, 92782
City of Villa Park,
92861, 92867
City of Westminster,
92683, 92684, 92685
City of Yorba Linda,
92885, 92886, 92887
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Noteworthy
communities Some of the communities that exist within city
limits are listed below:
* Anaheim Hills, Anaheim * Balboa Island, Newport Beach *
Corona del Mar, Newport Beach * Crystal Cove / Pelican Hill,
Newport Beach * Capistrano Beach, Dana Point * El Modena,
Orange * French Park, Santa Ana * Floral Park, Santa Ana *
Foothill Ranch, Lake Forest * Monarch Beach, Dana Point *
Nellie Gail, Laguna Hills * Northwood, Irvine * Woodbridge,
Irvine * Newport Coast, Newport Beach * Olive, Orange * Portola
Hills, Lake Forest * San Joaquin Hills, Laguna Niguel * San
Joaquin Hills, Newport Beach * Santa Ana Heights, Newport
Beach * Tustin Ranch, Tustin * Talega, San Clemente * West
Garden Grove, Garden Grove * Yorba Hills, Yorba Linda * Mesa
Verde, Costa Mesa
Unincorporated communities These communities are outside
of the city limits in unincorporated county territory:
* Coto de Caza * El Modena * Ladera Ranch * Las Flores * Midway
City * Orange Park Acres * Rossmoor * Silverado Canyon * Sunset
Beach * Surfside * Talega * Trabuco Canyon * Tustin Foothills
Adjacent counties to Orange County Are: * Los Angeles
County, California - north, west * San Bernardino County,
California - northeast * Riverside County, California - east
* San Diego County, California - southeast
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