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Artic Pest Control Home

APC is locally owned and operated in Orlando Florida with over fifteen years experience. We use the latest pest management techniques to service and protect your home and property from all sorts of pests from ants, roaches, and fleas to rats and mice. Artic Pest Control offers monthly, every other month, quarterly, one time and once per year services. On our first visit we do a complete inspection of the inside and outside of your home.

The first time we service your home we do a complete service on the inside and outside perimeter. Subsequent services we treat the outside perimeter where the pests come from and treat the inside of your home on a as needed basis free of charge at any time.

We offer a pest control schedule to fit your schedule:

  1. Service Monthly
  2. Service Every Other Month
  3. Service Quarterly
  4. Service Yearly Basis (We Service the Residence 4 Times Per Year)
  5. Service One Time Only (certain conditions apply)

Artic Pest Control offers many services and treats for all sorts of pests from:

  • ATTIC DUSTING
  • BED BUGS
  • FLEAS/TICKS
  • Roaches
  • RATS/MICE
  • ANTS
  • SILVERFISH
  • SPIDERS
  • AND MANY MORE...

fifteen percent off coupon

 

Phone: (407) 443-7612

E-mail: AdamL@articpest.com

Artic Pest Control News

Coping With Snakes

by M. Cerato and W.F. Andelt1 (5/06)
Snakes possess the following reptilian characteristics: they have scales; are ectothermic (they rely on external sources to control their body temperature); and, like most reptiles, lay eggs. Rattlesnakes, however, give birth in the autumn to five to 12 live young, each 10 inches or more in length (Klauber 1982). Contrary to its reputation of being slimy, snake skin is actually smooth and dry and will often be shed more than once each year to accommodate the growing body.

U.S. May Remove Humpbacks From List of Endangered Species

September 29, 2009 07:26 AM - R. Greenway, ENN
The U.S. National Marine Fisheries Service may remove the humpback whale from its list of endangered species, citing evidence that the species has rebounded from near extinction. Since an international ban on their whaling in 1966, populations of the north Pacific humpback have increased about 4.7 percent each year, researchers say. An estimated 18,000 to 20,000 humpbacks now exist in the north Pacific.