June 16, 1998

 

box
Terminate is "guaranteed to protect your home." But the guarantee covers only the cost of the product, not the cost of repairing termite damage -- something reputable pest control companies will do.

bait
With Terminate, instead of treating the house directly, you insert stakes around your home. They contain insecticide-treated bait.

termites
Experts are concerned consumers will see Terminate as a quick and easy termite fix.


Experts Question Claims of New Do-It-Yourself Termite Protection

A hot new product on the market claims it's a do-it-yourself alternative to costly professional termite control. But, as 5 On Your Side's Monica Laliberte explains, a couple of local pest experts are raising questions about the product called "Terminate."


Terminate, made by Spectracide, hit store shelves this past spring. After getting calls from consumers wondering about the product, state entomology experts contacted us. They want folks to know Terminate may not be the end all answer to your termite problems.

If undetected, termites can eat your home from the inside out. That's why a lot of homeowners hire pest control companies to inspect and chemically treat their homes.

An ad for Terminate, a product from Spectracide, says it's "do-it-yourself termite protection for a fraction of the cost of professionals."

With Terminate, instead of treating the house directly, you insert stakes around your home. They contain insecticide-treated bait. The idea is "worker" termites eat the bait and die. That leaves the rest of the termite colony without a food supply, and eventually, they all die.

Dr. Mike Waldvogel is an entomologist at North Carolina State University. Carl Falco heads the Pest Control Division of the Department of Agriculture. Both men question the claims of Terminate.

Dr. Waldvogel says there is no evidence to back up the claims.

"The data that the company has made available is mainly from studies they've done either in the lab or in limited situations. The question is whether these work in a full blown situation such as around your house."
Carl Falco is concerned consumers will see Terminate as a quick and easy termite fix.
""We are concerned that people will believe that all they have to do is put the product in the ground and there are no worries. The label, of course, doesn't say that, but the promotional materials we've seen certainly imply that."

On the box, Terminate warns, if your home has "active (termite) infestation..." you should have it inspected by "an authorized pest control firm" and have "some type of treatment" applied to the infested areas.

And although Terminate is "guaranteed to protect your home," the guarantee covers only the cost of the product, not the cost of repairing termite damage -- something reputable pest control companies will do.

And at a cost of about $80 for enough Terminate to "protect" a 3,000-square-foot home, Dr. Waldvogel feels the money could be better spent.

"I'd save it. I'd get my house inspected by a professional and if I needed to have it treated, that's what I would use that money for rather than spend it on this particular product."
Spectracide stands behind it's research and claims. A spokesman says, now the "consumer can treat and protect his home from a termite attack," saying that "Terminate is proven, tested, effective and affordable."

We want to make it clear that neither Dr. Waldvogel nor Carl Falco is saying that Terminate, or professional products like it, don't work. They say the research available at this time is inconclusive.

Reporter: Monica Laliberte
Photographer: Lori Lair
OnLine Producer: Michelle Singer
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