Contact us:
Corporate Office
914 E. Main St.
Streator, IL 61364
Bloomington
(309) 663-0505
Dwight
(815) 584-1010
Joliet
(815) 722-0505
Kakankee
(815) 802-0505
LaSalle/Peru
(815) 223-0505
Mendota
(815) 538-2992
Morris
(815) 942-0505
Ottawa
(815) 434-0505
Plano
(630) 552-1515
Pontiac
(815) 844-1010
Princeton
(815) 872-2127
Sandwich
(815) 786-6756
Seneca
(815) 357-1515
Streator
(815) 672-0505
Wilmington
(815) 476-5500
Toll-Free
1-800-525-0505

 

Sudden Service

 

Central Illinois based Quik - Kill Pest Eliminators has been providing residential & commercial pest elimination (not control), termite elimination (not control) for central and north central Illinois for over 40 years. Our pest elimination technicians are state licensed and certified, and use only government approved pest management practices. All of our pest services are 100% satisfaction guaranteed.
Earwig

Earwig

 

Appearance:

Adult earwigs measure 1/4 to 1 inch long, and have an elongate, flattened body. They are colored pale brown with dark markings to uniformly reddish brown to black, but with paler legs. Earwig adults usually have 4 wings. The front wings are leathery, short, and meet in a straight line down the back; whereas, the hind wings are membranous, fan-shaped, and are kept folded under the front wings. The cerci are well developed and forceps-like but usually differ in shape in the sexes. The antennae are threadlike, and about half the length of the body. Earwigs have chewing mouthparts. Nymphs are similar to adults but have no wings.

Habitat:

The European earwig, Forficula auricularia (Family Forficulidae) is the most common pest species and is abundant in the Midwest. Adults are about 5/8 inch long, including the forceps. Some males are considerably larger with forceps-like cerci of about 1/4 inch while other males have forceps of about 3/8 inch long. They are dark reddish-brown with reddish head and paler wing covers, legs, and antennae.

Earwigs typically overwinter outdoors as adults in protected situations. The European earwig overwinters in pairs in earthen cells 1 1/8 to 1 1/2 inches beneath the surface. The females lay and tend their eggs in these underground situations and then the newly hatched nymphs. Earwigs have 4 to 5 nymphal instars (immature growth stages). Nymphal development averages about 68 days for the European earwig and includes 4 instars. European earwig females lay about 30 to 55 eggs the first batch and many fewer the second time. The nymphal instars require about two months to complete development. Some females may live as long as 7 months after attaining maturity.

Earwigs have a distinctive disagreeable odor, which is released when they are crushed, but some species can squirt such a liquid. They are gregarious in nature, typically occurring in groups.

Earwigs are nocturnal or active at night and hide during the day in moist, shady places such as under stones or logs, or in mulch. Neither the eggs nor nymphs can withstand long periods of dryness.

Earwigs are attracted to lights or to insects attracted to lights. European earwigs often invade homes, sometimes by the hundreds or thousands. They may enter weep holes through brick facing and beneath siding along the foundation. They also bridge from tree and shrub branches in contact with building surfaces.

Diet:

Earwigs feed on live and dead plants and tiny insects. At times they damage cultivated plants. The European earwig occasionally damages vegetables, flowers, fruits, ornamental shrubs, and trees, and has been recorded as feeding on honey in beehives.

Solutions:

What you can do: The key to control is the removal of unessential mulch, plant debris, and objects such as stones and boards from around the structure. The purpose of this is to establish a low-moisture zone, which is disagreeable to earwigs. Since earwigs enter buildings beneath siding and through weep holes, utility penetrations and crevices in the foundation, some reduction in their numbers indoors can be achieved as a result of thorough exclusion efforts using silicone sealer, construction putty, mortar patch compound, and copper gauze as filler materials.

A vacuum cleaner and well-placed pest sticky traps can be used to capture earwigs indoors and in attached garages.

Professional Solutions:

A Quik-Kill pest management professional will apply an exterior barrier treatment around the foundation perimeter, beneath lower siding, along exterior molding/trim, thresholds, patio and deck attachments. Appropriate materials may be use to treat mulch and landscaping features located close to the foundation, as well. A regular pest management service program may be required in cases where large populations of earwigs are present and where landscaping conditions and locality are conducive to their propagation.

 


Click here to request additional information or to schedule your free inspection to determine treatment recommendations.


 

Locations
Proudly serving and providing pest elimination (not pest control !) to Central Illinois and North Central Illinois area since 1968, including the counties of LaSalle (Cedar Point, Dana, Earlville, Grand Ridge, Kangley, La Salle, Leland, Leonore, Lostant, Marseilles, Mendota, Naplate, North Utica, Oglesby, Ottawa, Peru, Ransom, Rutland, Sheridan, Streator, Tonica, Troy Grove), Livingston (Campus, Chatsworth, Cornell, Cullom, Dwight, Emington, Fairbury, Flanagan, Forrest, Long Point, Odell, Pontiac, Reading, Saunemin, Strawn), McLean(Anchor, Arrowsmith, Bellflower, Bloomington, Carlock, Chenoa, Colfax, Cooksville, Danvers, Downs, Ellsworth, Gridley, Heyworth, Hudson, Le Roy, Lexington, McLean, Normal, Saybrook, Stanford, Towanda), Bureau (Arlington, Buda, Bureau Junction, Cherry, Dalzell, De Pue, Dover, Hollowayville, Kasbeer, La Moille, Ladd, Malden, Manlius, Mineral, Neponset, New Bedford, Ohio, Princeton, Seatonville, Sheffield, Spring Valley, Tiskilwa, Van Orin, Walnut, Wyanet, Zearing), DuPage (Addison, Bensenville, Bloomingdale, Bolingbrook, Carol Stream, Clarendon Hills, Darien, Downers Grove, Elmhurst, Glendale Heights, Glen Ellyn, Itasca, Lisle, Lombard, Medinah, Naperville, Oakbrook, Roselle, Villa Park, Warrenville, Westmont, West Chicago, Wheaton, Willowbrook, Winfield, Woodbridge, Wood Dale, York Center), Grundy (Aux Sable, Braceville, Carbon Hill, Coal City, Diamond, Dwight, East Brooklyn, Gardner, Godley, Kinsman, Mazon, Minooka, Morris, Nettle Creek, Saratoga, Seneca, South Wilmington, Verona, Wauponsee), Kane (Burlington, Carpentersville, Elburn, Elgin, Geneva, Gilberts, Hampshire, Lily Lake, North Aurora, Pingree Grove, Sleepy Hollow, St. Charles, South Elgin, Sugar Grove, Virgil, West Dundee), Kankakee (Aroma Park, Bonfield, Bourbonnais, Bradley, Buckingham, Essex, Grant Park, Herscher, Hopkins Park, Irwin, Kankakee, Manteno, Momence, Reddick, St. Anne, Sun River Terrace, Union Hill), Kendall (Boulder Hill, Bristol, Lisbon, Millbrook, Millington, Newark, Oswego, Plano, Yorkville), Lee (Amboy, Ashton, Compton, Dixon, Franklin Grove, Harmon, Maytown, Nelson, Paw Paw, Steward, Sublette, West Brooklyn), Putnam (Granville, Hennepin, Magnolia, Mark, McNabb, Standard), Will (Beecher, Bolingbrook, Braidwood, Crest Hill, Frankfort, Joliet, Lakewood Shores, Lockport, Manhattan, Mokena, Monee, New Lenox, Romeoville, Shorewood, Steger, University Park), Woodford (Bay View Garden, Benson, Cazenovia, Congerville, Cruger, Goodfield, El Paso, Eureka, Germantown Hills, Kappa, Metamora, Minonk, Panola, Roanoke, Secor, Spring Bay, Washburn)