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Conference to Turn Spotlight on Urban Pests

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The UC Riverside Urban Pest Management Conference takes place March 25 at University Extension Center

By Iqbal Pittalwala on March 18, 2014

Some urban pests. Top left, going clockwise: Bed bugs; Yellowjacket wasps; Brown widow spider; Argentine ants; Drywood termites; and German cockroach. Photo credit: D-H Choe Lab, UC Riverside.

RIVERSIDE, Calif. As we move from an agrarian society to an urban one, we have had to take an increasing interest in arthropods, both beneficial and harmful, in our urban environment. These arthropods include cockroaches, bed bugs, termites and ants. Hence, the growing field of urban entomology, which focuses on the study of insects and other arthropods, such as spiders, affecting people and their property.

But what is the latest research on bed bugs? On termites? What are some low-impact methods for controlling ants? And what are some new invasive cockroach pests in California?

The public has the opportunity to get the answers to these and other questions pertinent to urban entomology at the 23rd annual UC Riverside Urban Pest Management Conference on March 25.

The daylong conference (7:15 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.) will take place at UC Riverside Extension Center (UNEX), 1200 University Ave., Riverside. Registration costs $110. The fee, which covers parking costs, is waived for reporters wishing to cover any part of the conference.

The intended audience is pest management professionals such as all the licensed individuals who work for pest management/control companies but also persons who are licensed to perform pest control as a part of their job but who do not work for pest control companies, said Dong-Hwan Choe, an assistant professor of entomology at UCR, who is co-chairing the conference. Examples of these types of people would be employees of a county, city, or school district that are charged with pest control/monitoring.

The biggest benefit to attending the conference for licensees is the opportunity to earn continuing education units (CEUs) from two different state licensing agencies: 1) the Structural Pest Control Board and 2) the California Department of Pesticide Regulation. Licensees under both agencies must continually earn CEUs in order to maintain their license(s).

Our conference always offers units in laws and regulations which are more difficult to earn as many conferences dont get speakers that cover this important subject area, said Kathleen Campbell, a staff research associate in the Department of Entomology, who is the conference coordinator. Our conference offers attendees a cast of speakers from a wide variety of areas.

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Conference to Turn Spotlight on Urban Pests


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