Pests in the Urban Landscape

Urban neighborhood and park.

The Pests in the Urban Landscape blog shares the latest sustainable pest management news and information from the UC IPM Urban & Community Program. 

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A retail shelf showing various pesticide containers. (Photo: Cheryl A. Reynolds)
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Amazon Fined for Selling Illegal Pesticides

March 8th, 2018
By Anne E Schellman
Online marketplace Amazon.com was recently fined $1.2 million by the United States Environmental Protection Agency (US EPA) for selling and distributing pesticides not registered for sale in the U.S. The EPA discovered nearly 4,000 violations dating back to 2013.
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Fig 1. The margin of a mole mound tends to be circular. (Credit: Larry A. Strand)
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What Made That Mound - a Gopher or a Mole?

March 5th, 2018
By Anne E Schellman
Finding freshly dug mounds of soil in the garden, lawn, or landscape might be a sign of gophers or moles. Their mounds look similar and are frequently confused for each other. Figure 1 shows a mole mound, which usually is volano-shaped with a circular margin.
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Larva and adult furniture carpet beetles. [Credit: D-H Choe]
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Top 20 Pest Notes of 2017

February 27th, 2018
By Karey Windbiel, Anne E Schellman
Pests have popularity contests too. We recently looked at how many visits our popular Pest Notes publication series received in 2017.
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Webbing clothes moth. (Photo credit: Clemson University, USDA Cooperative Extension Slide Series, Bugwood. org)
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Controlling Clothes Moths

February 20th, 2018
By Anne E Schellman
Spotting a small moth fluttering around your closet then discovering damaged fabric or other items can be shocking. Upon further inspection, you may even see the silken webs spun by the larvae, or the droppings they leave behind.
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Adult western conenose bug, Triatoma protracta. (Credit: Justin Schmidt)
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Kissing bugs are not your valentine

February 12th, 2018
By Karey Windbiel
Conenose or kissing bugs' (Triatoma spp.) are in the Reduviidae family, a group of insects known for a sturdy body and large proboscis. Most reduviids are beneficial as insect predators, and include various species of assassin bugs.
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