Silverfish can be tricky insects to get rid of. They are often a symptom of moisture problems within specific areas of a house or ...
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Silverfish are primitive, wingless insects that have adapted to living with people. They feed on most human foods, as well as starch, glue, paste, paper products and fabrics, even certain synthetic fabrics. Silverfish can travel throughout a building looking for food, and will commonly damage books, wallpaper, fabrics, photographs and paper products.
They typically avoid light, preferring to live in the dark, and infestations of silverfish usually pass unnoticed or are ignored until the population becomes large and widespread. At that point, of course, silverfish are difficult to control.
The common silverfish requires high humidity and warm temperatures to develop. It prefers a relative humidity of 75% to 95% and a temperature between 70°F and 80°F.
A silverfish infestation is often an indicator of excessive humidity and moisture problems somewhere in the building. Typical causes of moisture problems include the following:
The primary control tactic for a widespread silverfish infestation is to dry out all infested areas so that the silverfish are unable to reproduce and develop successfully. Unfortunately, there is no immediate fix: the drying process can take months or even longer. You can however, suppress silverfish populations in critical areas:
Silverfish do not like bright light, and there has been some success moving silverfish out of restricted areas with this technique.
It is important that you understand that it is unlikely that you will see results overnight. Control of a widespread outbreak of silverfish is a long-term project, requiring moisture problems to be corrected and the building dried out. Until that happens, control actions are just temporary.
Article provided by SDA Pest Control