Cuban Cockroach Facts and Information
Protect your home or business from Cuban cockroaches by learning techniques for identification and control.
Treatment
How do I get rid of Cuban cockroaches?
What You Can Do
Although Cuban cockroaches rarely infest a home, it is important to keep them outside. Since they are strongly attracted to lights, the best way to help prevent them from getting inside is to ensure that windows, doors, cracks, crevices, and crawl space doors are tightly sealed.
What Orkin Does
Your local Orkin Pro is trained to help manage Cuban cockroaches and similar pests. Since every building or home is different, your Orkin Pro will design a unique cockroach treatment program for your situation.
Orkin can provide the right solution to keep Cuban cockroaches in their place…out of your home, or business.
Frequently Asked Questions
Behavior, Diet & Habits
How to Identify Cuban Cockroaches
Appearance
-
Color: Adult Cuban cockroaches are light green with a thin yellow coloration on the front of their head and the front half of their wings. The nymphs are brown or black and are very different in appearance compared to the adults.
-
Size: Full-grown adults are about 3/4 to 1 inch long.
Diet
Cuban cockroaches typically feed on organic materials such as:
-
Food Scraps
-
Rotting Fruit
-
Paper Scraps
Habitat
Cuban cockroaches are usually found living in or under
-
Firewood Stacks
-
Leaf Piles
-
Logs
-
Mulch
-
Plant Debris
-
Shrubbery
-
Trees
Geographic Range
The Cuban cockroach is found in many areas of Florida and along the Gulf Coast states into central Texas. It may be introduced into northern city seaports since it often is found in banana shipments. This species is native to Cuba.
Life Cycle
Cuban cockroaches go through three developmental stages:
-
Eggs
-
Nymphs
-
Adults
Female Cuban cockroaches carry the egg case inside their body, and unlike other cockroach species, the Cuban cockroach egg case is crescent shaped. Eggs develop inside the female’s abdomen for about two months and then emerge as nymphs. Females give birth to about 30 nymphs at a time.