Why a Visible Cockroach in University Park Is Never Just One Cockroach
Cockroaches are active at night and rest in concealed harborage sites during the day — behind refrigerators, inside wall voids, under sinks, within cabinet hinges, and inside electrical appliances. When a cockroach is spotted in daylight, it means the colony has grown large enough to push individuals out of established harborage zones.
The two species our University Park technicians treat most frequently are the German cockroach and the American cockroach — each requiring a different approach. German cockroaches live and breed entirely indoors, reproduce at high rates, and are prone to developing resistance when repeatedly exposed to the same insecticide. Species identification is the essential first step.
Do Not Spray Before a Professional Inspection
Aerosol sprays applied before professional inspection scatter cockroaches into deeper wall voids and cavities — fragmenting the colony and significantly complicating accurate assessment. If you have seen cockroach activity in your University Park property, call a specialist before attempting any treatment yourself.
Health Risks
- Bacterial Contamination: Cockroaches harbour and mechanically transfer bacteria — including Salmonella, E. coli, and Staphylococcus — across food preparation surfaces, utensils, and stored food. A single foraging cockroach can contaminate surfaces it crosses.
- Respiratory Allergen Exposure: Research consistently identifies cockroach-derived allergens — frass, shed cuticle fragments, and saliva — as significant triggers for asthma attacks and allergic rhinitis. In heavily infested properties, airborne allergen levels can remain elevated long after the infestation is treated without thorough cleaning.