

Author: Rivault C. Cloarec A.
Publisher: Academic Press
ISSN: 0301-4797
Source: Journal of Environmental Management, Vol.45, Iss.4, 1995-12, pp. : 379-393
Disclaimer: Any content in publications that violate the sovereignty, the constitution or regulations of the PRC is not accepted or approved by CNPIEC.
Abstract
The aim of our study was to analyse the results of controlled series of professional insecticide treatments on feral cockroach populations in council flats in three similar multi-family buildings, and to try to understand why control success could be so low. Cockroach abundance and six general environmental characteristics were recorded after each treatment for each flat treated. Cockroach abundance was divided into five levels. The environmental characteristics recorded for each flat were: nationality of residents, duration of occupation, number of residents/m , application of domestic pesticides, reactions of residents to the presence of cockroaches, and degree of cleanliness. This series of treatments, proposed every two months, did not improve the situation as greatly as expected. The presence or the absence of cockroaches in flats can be explained at least partly by some environmental factors like human density in the flat, building effect and cleanliness, but no single factor explains the size of the cockroach population. The usual reasons evoked to explain pest control failures, such as cockroach insecticide resistance, inefficiency of treatments due to formulation, proportion of constituent in compound, periodicity of application, etc., all influence the result of a treatment, of course, but our data show that the part played by the residents in a given dwelling has been greatly underestimated so far. When the results of treatments were analysed, the results depended largely on the residents` attitude.