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  2. Roach bait - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roach_bait

    The insecticide-laden feces, fluids and eventual carcass, can contain sufficient residual pesticide to kill others in the same nesting site. As the roach staggers around for hours or even days, it infects other roaches in the nest, with toxicant transfer through feces, [1] which then go on to infect others. This secondary transmission occurs ...

  3. Raid (insecticide) - Wikipedia

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

    As of 2019 Raid Ant & Roach Killer contains pyrethroids, imiprothrin, and cypermethrin; [3] other products contain tetramethrin and prallethrin as active ingredients. [4] Raid Flying Insect Killer, a spray, uses piperonyl butoxide and D-phenothrin. [5] The brand was sold as Ridsect for Malaysian market.

  4. Roach Motel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roach_Motel

    Roach Motel is an American brand of a roach bait device designed to catch cockroaches.Although the term is the subject of a trademark registration by the insect control brand Black Flag, the phrase roach motel has come to be used as a reference to all traps that use a scent or other form of bait to lure cockroaches into a compartment in which a sticky substance causes them to become trapped.

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  6. Fipronil - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fipronil

    Commercial pet groomers and veterinary physicians were considered to be at risk from chronic exposure via inhalation and dermal absorption during the application of the spray, assuming they may have to treat up to 20 large dogs per day. [18] Fipronil is not volatile, so the likelihood of humans being exposed to this compound in the air is low. [17]

  7. Madagascar hissing cockroach - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Madagascar_hissing_cockroach

    It is one of some 20 known species of large hissing roaches from Madagascar, many of which are kept as pets, and often confused with one another by pet dealers; in particular, G. portentosa is commonly confused with G. oblongonota [1] [better source needed] and G. picea. [2] Unlike most cockroaches, they are wingless.