I deal with this species daily.  The roaches are in the planting mulch in the 
pots.  Get the plants out and wash away the soil.  All pots should be empty and 
all soil heat treated to 145 f for 4 hours or frozen for a week.  Then you can 
pot the plants.  Keep pots off ground and apply cockroach bait gel to the legs/ 
rollers monthly.  Magnetic roach gel is great and only boric acid.  You can 
also set bait stations for roaches thru out the areas...Jim harmonCalifornia 
pest management 

Sent from AOL on Android 
 
  On Mon, Jan 29, 2024 at 5:16 PM, Matthew Mickletz<mmickl...@gmail.com> wrote: 
  Hi Jef,
I’ll give a try at helping you out. I’m new into the world of horticultural 
IPM, but have had to inspect a few truckloads of plants from California and 
Florida. 
When we scout the plants for pests, we’re usually finding insects harmful to 
the plant. Occasionally we’ll get an anole lizard pop out and fire ants in the 
soil. At any rate, our tactic is pesticide application. Not always something 
everyone wants to jump to do, which is understandable. Tom’s suggestion of 
baiting is definitely something to consider doing they are where they are. 
So, you could, before the plants go to their destination (a location away from 
animals and people) have the plants sprayed and/or drenched by a licensed 
pesticide applicator. There is a restricted entry interval (REI) that will pass 
after a certain amount of time depending on what’s used, then you’re good to go 
and be around the plants - ranges from a few hours to 24 hours. 
I’ll gladly pass this to colleagues with a bit more experience and get back to 
you with more ideas! Especially since I’m typing on my phone in a parking lot 
haha!
Best,Matt Mickletz
Longwood Gardens 

Sent from my iPhone

On Jan 29, 2024, at 15:26, Jef Taylor <jefctay...@gmail.com> wrote:



Hello everyone,My situation is probably different from most of you, as the 
collection I protect consists of live animals. I work in a zoo, and read all of 
your posts with bemused interest. I'm posting because I'm wondering if anyone 
here knows of a standard protocol for ensuring live plants are not hosting 
structural pests before they are moved from place to place. 

My concern is that plants that are in place temporarily in a building infested 
with American, Australian, and Surinam cockroaches, will serve as habitat for 
these insects, and spread them to new places when those plants are installed in 
a new building. I'm wondering if I need to research what port inspectors do to 
prevent pest introductions with transcontinental commerce, or if there is 
something available in the plant nursery industry.

I asked our horticulture curator, and did some basic googling, but I didn't get 
too much from those resources. 

Sorry if this is out of the usual parameters of this group, but I admire your 
expertise and attention to detail and thought it was worth a try.

Jef C Taylor
IPM specialistZoo New England

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