Posts Tagged ‘Wasps Nests’

Wigan Pest Control New Website

Wigan Pest Control New Website

Wigan Pest Control New Website – The Harrier Pest Prevention group are pleased to announce the launch of their latest regional website targeting the Wigan area.

Wigan Pest Control can be found at http://wiganpestcontrol.com

Manchester Pest Control Launch New Website Wasps Nests £32.00 Bed Bugs

Manchester Pest Control Launch New Website Wasps Nests £32.00 Bed Bugs

0161 930 8814

Manchester Pest Control Launch New Website Wasps Nests £32.00 Bed Bugs – Manchester Pest Control, Manchester’s foremost pest control company have a launched a new website Manchester Pest Control for the busy summer wasps nest season and to help all our customers in credit crunch times we are fixing our price for destroying wasps nests at just £32.00 for the foreseeable future, at least until 2011. This is outstanding value when you consider the price charged by some other companies and Borough Councils.

For the summer of 2010 Manchester Pest Control will be attempting to provide a same day call out service where possible and providing a wasps nest service seven days per week with no extra charge made for evening and weekend work.

Bed bugs are a speciality of   Manchester Pest Control and we use the utmost discretion, we can normally deal with the infestation without the need to buy new beds. If you suspect you may have bed bugs then ring Manchester Pest Control

For any pest control problem please choose a link below.

Manchester Pest Control

Manchester Pest Control Ants

Manchester Pest Control Wasps

Manchester Pest Control Fleas

Manchester Pest Control Rats and Mice

Manchester Pest Control

Manchester Pest Control Bed Bugs

Manchester Pest Control Cockroaches

Manchester Pest Control Squirrels

Manchester Pest Control Birds

Manchester Pest Control Carpet Beetles

Manchester Pest Control

Manchester Pest Control Biscuit Beetle

Manchester Pest Control Booklice

Manchester Pest Control Cluster Flies

Manchester Pest Control Fur Beetles

Manchester Pest Control Honey Bee Swarms

Manchester Pest Control Larder Beetles

Manchester Pest Control

Manchester Pest Control Pharaohs Ants

Manchester Pest Control Silverfish

Manchester Pest Control Spider Beetles

Manchester Pest Control Spiders

Manchester Pest Control Argentine Ants

Manchester Pest Control Mites

Manchester Pest Control Moles

Manchester Pest Control Products

Manchester Pest Control

Trafford Wasps Nest

Wasps Nest

Manchester Pest Control Launch New Web Site Wasps Nests £32.00 Bed Bugs

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Harrier Lancashire & Manchester Pest Control New Areas & Websites

Harrier Lancashire & Manchester Pest Control New Areas & Websites

0800 019 8382 or 01257 230637.

Harrier Lancashire & Manchester Pest Control New Areas & Websites – Harrier pest control who have traditionally covered Manchester, South Lancashire and North Cheshire have extended their area of operation for 2010 and announce a series of new partner websites.

Harrier pest control have a fixed price for wasps nest destruction during 2010 0f just £32.00 except for customers on postal codes L, CH & CW where unfortunately we have to charge £44.50 to cover increased travel but as we do not charge extra for evening or weekend callouts this still makes us very competitive with other local companies and local authority pest control operatives, some of whom charge over £50.00.

We work seven days per week and will do our best to fit in with your busy schedule and not keep you waiting in all day. If the nest is accessible without going through the house you can even pre-pay by credit or debit card and we will destroy the nest whilst you are out. If it is urgent please let us know you have paid by telephone as we only pick up our email at the end of the working day. Use the buttons below to prepay.

Lancashire Cheshire Manchester Pest Control

Areas of Operation

Prepay your wasps nest then ring us to let us know.

Wasp Nest £32.00 all areas except Post Codes L, CH & CW – Pay Now

Wasp Nest £44.50 Post Codes L, CH & CW – Pay Now

New Partner Websites
Birchwood Pest Control – 01925 670375
Knutsford Pest Control – 01565 849212
Croft Pest Control – 01925 670375
Cheshire Pest Control – 01925 670375
Culcheth Pest Control – 01925 670375
Ellesmere Port Pest Control – 01565 849212
Frodsham Pest Control – 01565 849212
Grappenhall Pest Control – 01925 670375
Macclesfield Pest Control – 01565 849212
Newton Le Willows – 01925 670375
Penketh Pest Control – 01925 670375
Runcorn Pest Control – 01565 849212
Warrington Pest Control – 01925 670375
Weaverham Pest Control – 01565 849212
Woolston Pest Control – 01925 670375
Harrier Lancashire & Manchester Pest Control New Areas & Websites
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Stockport Wasps' Nests Destroyed £32.00

Wasps’ Nests Destroyed £32.00 Stockport

Stockport Pest Prevention

Stockport based Stockport Pest Prevention announce that there will be no increase in their fixed price to destroy wasps’ nests in 2009, in Trafford.

Stockport Pest Prevention will get rid of wasps’ nests for you if you live in or around Trafford, seven days per week for a fixed price of £32.00.

Wasps’ nests can often be destroyed same day, give us a call to check for availability.

It is not advisable to allow a wasps’ nest to remain untreated as in September many thousands of queens will be produced and this may then require additional cost work such as fogging the roof void or loft, but until then we charge £32.00, no add-ons.

If you have more than one wasps’ nest on the same property in Trafford we do not charge extra for the second wasps’ nest and then only £10 each for the third and subsequent nests.

Many council pest controllers in Trafford are charging £52 for the first wasps’ nest and £30 for each subsequent.

To arrange a visit call us :

Cheshire 01565 849212

Lancashire 01772 837727

Manchester 0161 452 3165

Wigan 01942 504096

Trafford 01204 689361

Blackpool 01253 843019

Blackburn 01254 739138

Warrington  01925 670375

Sale & Altrincham 0161 930 8814

Chorley 01257 230637

Stockport Pest Prevention

Stockport Pest Control & Prevention specialise in Pest Control and Pest Prevention of:
Wasps, Bees, Rats, Mice, Bed Bugs, Ants, Wasps, Squirrels, Beetles, Pigeons, Wasps Nests, Birds, Moles, Flies, Starlings, Wasp’s Nests, Spiders, Magpies, Fleas, Bedbugs, Wasps’ Nests, Insects and Rodents in the following areas:

Appley Bridge, Accrington, Adlington, Alderley Edge, Altrincham, Ashton in Makerfield, Astley, Atherton, Bebington, Burscough, Formby, Blackburn, Blackpool, Trafford, Bootle, Boothstown, Bowden, Bramhall, Bury, Chadderton, Stockport, Croston, Stockport Hulme, Cheshire, Chorley, Culcheth, Darwen, Davyhulme, Didsbury, Euxton, Eccles, Eccleston, Farnworth, Flixton, Formby,  Frodsham, Fylde, Garstang, Gatley, Handforth, Stockport, Glazebury, Golborne, Greater Manchester, Hale, Hale Barnes, Harwood, Haydock, Heywood, Horwich, Helsby, Hazel Grove, Irlam, Kearsley, Knutsford, Lancashire, Leigh, Liverpool, Little Lever, Lymm, Manchester, Macclesfield, Middleton, Northenden, Northwich, Oldham, Partington, Preston, Prestwich, Poynton, Radcliffe, Rochdale, St Helens, Sale, Salford, Skelmersdale, Southport, St Helens, Stockport, Standish, Stretford, Swinton, Thameside, Timperley, Tarporley, Trafford, Tyldesley, Urmston, Walkden,Trafford, Weaverham, Wigan, Wilmslow, Woolston, Worsley, Trafford, Weaverham, Wigan, Winsford, Weaverham, Wilmslow, Woolston, Worsley,Westhoughton, Wirral, Birkenhead,Wallasey, Hoylake, Heswall, Winsford, Middlewich, Runcorn, Widnes, Rainhill, Croft, Halewood, Prescott, Huyton

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Wasps' Nests Destroyed £32.00 Manchester, Stockport, Cheadle, Gatley, Didsbury

Wasps’ Nests Destroyed £32.00 Manchester, Stockport, Cheadle, Gatley, Didsbury

0161 930 8814

Wasps’ Nests Destroyed £32.00 Manchester, Stockport, Cheadle, Gatley, Didsbury – Manchester Pest Control announce there will be no change in their fixed price of £32.00 to destroy wasps’ nests throughout the Manchester region, Manchester, Lancashire and Cheshire, in 2010. We work 7 days per week and do not charge extra at any time, evenings or weekends.

Social wasps

The nests of some social wasps, such as hornets, are first constructed by the queen and reach about the size of a walnut before sterile female workers take over construction. The queen initially starts the nest by making a single layer or canopy and working outwards until she reaches the edges of the cavity. Beneath the canopy she constructs a stalk to which she can attach several cells; these cells are where the first eggs will be laid. The queen then continues to work outwards to the edges of the cavity after which she adds another tier. This process is repeated, each time adding a new tier until eventually enough female workers have been born and matured to take over construction of the nest leaving the queen to focus on reproduction. For this reason, the size of a nest is generally a good indicator of approximately how many female workers there are in the colony. Social wasp colonies often have populations exceeding several thousand female workers and at least one queen. Polistes and some related types of paper wasp do not construct their nests in tiers but rather in flat single combs.

Social wasp reproductive cycle (temperate species only)

A young paper wasp queen founding a new colony.

Wasps do not reproduce via mating flights like bees. Instead social wasps reproduce between a fertile queen and male wasp; in some cases queens may be fertilized by the sperm of several males. After successfully mating, the male’s sperm cells are stored in a tightly packed ball inside the queen. The sperm cells are kept stored in a dormant state until they are needed the following spring. At a certain time of the year (often around autumn), the bulk of the wasp colony dies away, leaving only the young mated queens alive. During this time they leave the nest and find a suitable area to hibernate for the winter.

First stage

After emerging from hibernation during early spring, the young queens search for a suitable nesting site. Upon finding an area for their future colony, the queen constructs a basic paper fiber nest roughly the size of a walnut into which she will begin to lay eggs.

Second stage

The sperm that was stored earlier and kept dormant over winter is now used to fertilize the eggs being laid. The storage of sperm inside the female queen allows her to lay a considerable number of fertilized eggs without the need for repeated mating with a male wasp. For this reason a single female queen is capable of building an entire colony from only herself. The queen initially raises the first several sets of wasp eggs until enough sterile female workers exist to maintain the offspring without her assistance. All of the eggs produced at this time are sterile female workers who will begin to construct a more elaborate nest around their queen as they grow in number.

Third stage

European paper wasp (Polistes dominula) with a regurgitated droplet of water

By this time the nest size has expanded considerably and now numbers between several hundred and several thousand wasps. Towards the end of the summer, the queen begins to run out of stored sperm to fertilize more eggs. These eggs develop into fertile males and fertile female queens. The male drones then fly out of the nest and find a mate thus perpetuating the wasp reproductive cycle. In most species of social wasp the young queens mate in the vicinity of their home nest and do not travel like their male counterparts do. The young queens will then leave the colony to hibernate for the winter once the other worker wasps and founder queen have started to die off. After successfully mating with a young queen, the male drones die off as well. Generally, young queens and drones from the same nest do not mate with each other; this ensures more genetic variation within wasp populations, especially considering that all members of the colony are theoretically the direct genetic descendants of the founder queen and a single male drone. In practice, however, colonies can sometimes consist of the offspring of several male drones. Wasp queens generally (but not always) create new nests each year, probably because the weak construction of most nests render them uninhabitable after the winter.

Unlike honey bee queens, wasp queens typically live for only one year. Also queen wasps do not organize their colony or have any raised status and hierarchical power within the social structure. They are more simply the reproductive element of the colony and the initial builder of the nest in those species which construct nests.

Social wasp caste structure

A wasp gathering wood fibers

Not all social wasps have castes that are physically different in size and structure. In many polistine paper wasps and stenogastrines, for example, the castes of females are determined behaviorally, through dominance interactions, rather than having caste predetermined. All female wasps are potentially capable of becoming a colony’s queen and this process is often determined by which female successfully lays eggs first and begins construction of the nest. Evidence suggests that females compete amongst each other by eating the eggs of other rival females. The queen may, in some cases, simply be the female that can eat the largest volume of eggs while ensuring that her own eggs survive (often achieved by laying the most). This process theoretically determines the strongest and most reproductively capable female and selects her as the queen. Once the first eggs have hatched, the subordinate females stop laying eggs and instead forage for the new queen and feed the young; that is, the competition largely ends, with the losers becoming workers, though if the dominant female dies, a new hierarchy may be established with a former “worker” acting as the replacement queen. Polistine nests are considerably smaller than many other social wasp nests, typically housing only around 250 wasps, compared to the several thousand common with yellowjackets, and stenogastrines have the smallest colonies of all, rarely with more than a dozen wasps in a mature colony.

Wasps’ Nests Destroyed £32.00 Manchester, Stockport, Cheadle, Gatley, Didsbury

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