Structural Damage / concern
6 entr(ies)
Formosan Subterranean Termite
An invasive subterranean termite that builds enormous underground colonies and aerial carton nests, attacking structural wood and even living trees far faster than native termites.House Mouse
A small, gray-brown commensal rodent that lives in close association with people, nesting in walls, appliances, and stored goods, and known for droppings, gnaw marks, and a musky odor.Norway Rat
A large, stocky burrowing rodent that nests at ground level in and around buildings, contaminates food, gnaws structures, and can carry diseases that affect people.Old House Borer
A longhorned beetle whose larvae tunnel for years inside seasoned softwood timbers, most often pine, slowly weakening structural wood in buildings.Pacific Dampwood Termite
A large, caramel-to-dark-brown termite of the Pacific coast that nests inside moist, water-damaged wood rather than in soil, found from British Columbia to Baja California.Western Drywood Termite
A wood-nesting termite of the western U.S. that lives entirely inside dry, sound wood — framing, furniture, dead tree limbs — without any contact with soil, betraying itself mainly by piles of tiny six-sided fecal pellets.
An invasive subterranean termite that builds enormous underground colonies and aerial carton nests, attacking structural wood and even living trees far faster than native termites.House Mouse
A small, gray-brown commensal rodent that lives in close association with people, nesting in walls, appliances, and stored goods, and known for droppings, gnaw marks, and a musky odor.Norway Rat
A large, stocky burrowing rodent that nests at ground level in and around buildings, contaminates food, gnaws structures, and can carry diseases that affect people.Old House Borer
A longhorned beetle whose larvae tunnel for years inside seasoned softwood timbers, most often pine, slowly weakening structural wood in buildings.Pacific Dampwood Termite
A large, caramel-to-dark-brown termite of the Pacific coast that nests inside moist, water-damaged wood rather than in soil, found from British Columbia to Baja California.Western Drywood Termite
A wood-nesting termite of the western U.S. that lives entirely inside dry, sound wood — framing, furniture, dead tree limbs — without any contact with soil, betraying itself mainly by piles of tiny six-sided fecal pellets.