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  2. Home Depot garden coupons - AOL

    www.aol.com/2010/08/11/home-depot-garden-coupons

    Join the Home Depot Garden Club and get an occasional email with gardening tips, product reviews, and coupons. It's a combo of a soft sell for Home Depot garden products and useful gardening tips ...

  3. 5 Little-Known Perks of a Home Depot Pro Xtra Membership - AOL

    www.aol.com/5-little-known-perks-home-100020845.html

    The Home Depot's Pro Xtra membership is free and comes with valuable perks. Take a look at five of the most significant. 5 Little-Known Perks of a Home Depot Pro Xtra Membership

  4. Raid (insecticide) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raid_(insecticide)

    Raid is the brand name of a line of insecticide products produced by S. C. Johnson & Son, first launched in 1956. The initial active ingredient was allethrin, the first synthetic pyrethroid. [1] Raid derivatives aimed at particular invertebrate species can contain other active agents such as the more toxic cyfluthrin which is also a pyrethroid. [2]

  5. Prallethrin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prallethrin

    It is also the primary insecticide in certain products for killing wasps and hornets, including their nests. It is the main ingredient in the consumer product "Hot Shot Ant & Roach Plus Germ Killer" spray. [1] The vaporizer contains Prallethrin in isoparaffin solvents.

  6. Fly spray - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fly_spray

    Fly spray contains chemicals (including many organophosphate compounds) that bind to and permanently block the action of an enzyme called acetylcholinesterase. [1] Acetyl choline (ACh) is the nerve transmitter substance released by motor neurones (at a site called the neuromuscular junction) to stimulate muscle contraction.

  7. Dolichovespula arenaria - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dolichovespula_arenaria

    D. arenaria can be identified by the medially interrupted or incised apical fasciae of terga 1 and 2. [6] They are yellow in color and can be differentiated from the other yellow-colored wasps, such as D. adulterina, in its genus by the lack of black markings in the ocular sinus. [6]