Carbamate
A class of insecticides that work by inhibiting acetylcholinesterase in insect nervous systems. Examples: carbaryl (Sevin), bendiocarb. Generally more toxic to mammals than pyrethroids.
Carrier
An inert substance (clay, talc, water) used to dilute or deliver an active ingredient in a pesticide formulation.
Caste
A specialized group within a social insect colony (termites, ants, bees) with distinct physical form and behavioral role. Castes include workers, soldiers, reproductives (alates), and queens.
Chitin
The tough polysaccharide that forms the primary structural component of insect exoskeletons. Chitin inhibitors (insect growth regulators) disrupt its synthesis, preventing normal molting.
Chitin Inhibitor
A type of insect growth regulator (IGR) that prevents insects from forming chitin correctly during molting. Affected insects cannot shed their old exoskeleton and die. Example: diflubenzuron (Dimilin).
Chlorfenapyr
A pyrrole insecticide that disrupts mitochondrial function in insects. Used for bed bugs (Phantom) and termites; effective against pyrethroid-resistant populations.
Chloropicrin
A warning agent (tear-gas compound) added to fumigants like Vikane (sulfuryl fluoride) to alert occupants of fumigant presence.
Cockroach
Any of approximately 4,600 species in order Blattodea, of which 30 are structural pests. German, American, Oriental, brown-banded, and smoky brown cockroaches are the primary US pest species.
Colony
A social group of insects (ants, termites, bees, wasps) living and working together. Colony size ranges from dozens (paper wasps) to millions (Formosan termites).
Companion Planting
Growing specific plants near structures or crops to repel or confuse pest insects. A low-efficacy preventive strategy in IPM programs.
Complete Metamorphosis
Development through four distinct stages: egg, larva, pupa, adult (holometabolism). Includes beetles, flies, moths, butterflies, fleas, and wasps. The pupal stage is often the hardest to kill with pesticides.
Concentration
The percentage or amount of active ingredient in a pesticide product. Professional concentrates require dilution; ready-to-use (RTU) products are pre-diluted.
Contact Insecticide
A pesticide that kills insects by direct contact β either through touching the wet spray or walking over a dried residue. Contrasted with systemic insecticides.
Crawl Space
The unfinished area between the ground and first floor of a building. A high-moisture crawl space is one of the primary entry and harborage points for subterranean termites and rodents.
Cricket
Orthopteran insects (family Gryllidae) that enter homes in fall. House crickets can cause fabric damage; field crickets are occasional invaders. Controlled with perimeter sprays and gel baits.
Cuticle
The outermost layer of an insect's exoskeleton, composed of chitin and protein. Desiccant insecticides (diatomaceous earth, silica gel) work by abrading and absorbing the cuticle's waxy layer.
Cryptobiotic
Able to survive in a dormant state under extreme environmental conditions. Relevant to bed bug resilience β bed bugs can survive without feeding for 12-18 months under cool conditions.