Not applicable
The present invention relates to bait stations, preferably insecticidal bait stations, for the control of various pests such as cockroaches and ants.
A variety of devices for holding poisonous bait to control crawling pests are known. These range from simple cardboard tubes open at both ends with a toxic bait glued inside, to more elaborate structures that have a centrally enclosed bait accessible by peripheral openings. Some of these devices are configured to hold a solid bait/toxicant preparation. “Solid” in this context means a non-pourable substance such as pastes, highly viscous gels, firm solids, and the like. For example, U.S. Pat. No. 4,837,969 shows an insect bait station suitable for holding a solid bait.
Other insect control devices are configured to make available to crawling pests a liquid bait/toxicant. For example, U.S. Pat. No. 5,033,229 discloses a bait station for passive control of insects, particularly roaches, that provides a source of a liquid bait-toxicant solution, and U.S. Pat. No. 5,501,033 discloses other techniques for the controlled delivery of a liquid insecticidal bait.
Some insect control devices are configured to hold both a liquid and a solid bait/toxicant, with those toxicants separately retained. For instance, U.S. Pat. No. 2,167,978 discloses an insect control device having a paralyzing insect powder as well as a liquid attractant (water) wicked upwardly to a desired position from a reservoir; U.S. Pat. No. 5,339,563 discloses the use of a liquid positioned adjacent an insecticidal material; and U.S. Pat. No. 5,749,168 discloses an insect control device having liquid and solid bait.
Still other bait stations have been provided containing solid, liquid, and/or both type, bait/toxicants. See e.g. U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,630,755, 4,837,969, 5,038,516, 5,040,327, 5,531,043, 6,553,712, and U.S. patent application publication 2004/0079025.
While insect bait stations that offer both a solid poisonous “meal” and a poisonous “drink” are quite advantageous, as crawling insects will be enticed to consume both solid and liquid poisonous materials, they are also advantageous because certain types of pests prefer liquid baits while others prefer solid baits. A bait station with both types of baits can therefore control a wider variety of pests.
However, currently available insect control devices that include liquid baits do not provide for an optimally convenient means for sealing the liquid during transport and storage, and then releasing the liquid for access by the pest when the insect bait station is placed into service. U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,247,042, 4,526,320, 3,727,840 and 5,875,968 disclose vaporizers in which a liquid, for example an insecticide solution or a deodorizing liquid, is contained in a reservoir having a readily breakable closure. The closure is pierced when the device is first activated allowing the volatile liquid to escape. However, these structures are used in vaporizer units.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,553,712 disclose a bait station having a lower reservoir for holding a liquid bait/insecticide. That reservoir is covered by a pierceable upper wall. By pressing down on the cover, the cover drives a cage in which a wick is housed, with the cage splitting the pierceable wall to place the wick element in communication with the liquid through the sides of the cage. However, the presence of the cage slows the contact of the wick and the fluid. Further, the cage can be somewhat difficult to construct.
Thus, there is a need for a bait station that provides a convenient and inexpensive means for safely containing liquid bait during transport and storage, and then for activating the liquid bait when the insect bait station is placed into service.
In one aspect the invention provides a bait station for controlling pests comprising a container housing a liquid toxicant, wherein the container includes an access port enclosed with a seal, a cover positioned over the container, a wick and a retaining structure for mounting the wick over the access port. Downward movement of a portion of the cover section can drive the wick directly against the seal in the access port to drive the wick through the access port and into contact the liquid toxicant in the container.
In one preferred form, the seal comprises a piercable section of the container. The piercable section can provided in an upper wall of the container.
The upper wall of the enclosed container can also include an open recess at least partially housing a solid bait and an upwardly directed collar which surrounds the pierceable section and serves to guide vertical movement of the wick.
In another preferred form the seal is provided by a lower sealing cap directly affixed to a lower end of the wick.
The movable portion of the cover is most preferably a bi-stable flexible area of the cover which has an upward position prior to use of the device and a downward position once the device is activated.
In another aspect the invention provides a bait station for controlling pests comprising an enclosed container housing a liquid toxicant, the enclosed container including an upper portion with a pierceable section, a cover section positioned over the enclosed container, a base section coupled to the cover, a wick, and a retaining structure for mounting the wick over the pierceable section between the cover section and base section. Downward movement of a portion of the cover section drives the wick against the pierceable section to cause the wick to pierce the pierceable section and contact the liquid toxicant in the enclosed container.
In still another preferred form of the invention, the enclosed container of the bait station can include a substantially rigid upper portion. A guide sleeve can be formed in the substantially rigid upper portion of the enclosed container to provide the retaining structure, and an open recess can be formed in the substantially rigid upper portion for receiving a solid bait.
In yet another aspect of the invention, the bait station can comprise a seal coupled to the rigid upper portion to provide the enclosed container. The seal can be a flexible film.
In yet another preferred form of the invention, at least one of the cover and the base can comprise a plurality of tabs and the other of the cover and the base can comprise a plurality of mating apertures for receiving the tabs to couple the cover to the base.
In another aspect of the invention, a bait station for controlling a pest is provided comprising a housing which is substantially pie wedge-shaped in top view, bait and toxicant is provided within the housing, and first and second spaced entrances provided along a curved side of the housing.
The housing can comprises a cover section coupled to a base section, and an enclosed container can be received between the cover section and the base section for housing the bait and toxicant. The enclosed container can include an upper portion with a pierceable section, a wick, and a guide sleeve formed in the enclosed container for mounting the wick over the pierceable section. An upper wall of the enclosed container comprises a substantially rigid material, and a film sheet that can be sealed to an edge of the upper wall to form the enclosed container.
The term “molding” as used herein includes thermoforming, blow molding, injection molding, and other conventional means of creating shaped plastic parts.
The structures of the present invention allow liquid bait to be safely stored during shipment and prior to use. A consumer can, in a highly intuitive manner, press down on the cover of the bait station to cause the wick to access the liquid bait. No complex cages are required to protect the wick. The wick either directly breaks the pierceable section, or directly carries a seal with no need for a pierceable section.
The stations can be sized to be appropriate for a target pest and permit access by both crawling and flying insects and other pests (e.g. rodents), regardless of how the device is positioned relative to the walls of a room. Further, they can be inexpensively produced.
These and still other advantages of the present invention will appear from the following description. In that description reference is made to the accompanying drawings in which there is shown by way of illustration preferred embodiments of the invention. However, still other embodiments are meant to be within the scope of the invention.
Referring first to
The first feeding station provides a solid toxicant/bait mix 18, while the second feeding station provides a liquid toxicant/bait mix 28 (see
The wicking element 25 can be constructed of known porous wicking materials such as ceramics, fibrous or porous polymeric materials, small-pored sponges, capillaries, lattice matrices of cellulosic materials, and polyolefenic materials. However, where it is to be used to pierce a portion of the lower base, it should be of sufficient strength and integrity to perform that function.
The solid bait 18 may be formulated from known solid bait-toxicant formulations, depending on the pest to be controlled. An example of a suitable solid bait-toxicant for ants or cockroaches would be a material that is about 95% bait (peanut butter, peanut oil, vegetable oil, sugar, non-fat dried milk), less than 1% of a toxicant (e.g. abamectin available from Sygenta, Inc. of Wilmington, Del.), and the remainder a filler/binder such as a wax.
The liquid bait 28 may be formulated from liquid baiting/toxic formulations that are known, again depending on the pest to be controlled. The liquid can be water, edible vegetable oils such as peanut oil or corn oil, other carriers such as milk, or a combination of two bait forms of varying solubility for example both water and an oil. The toxicants can be, for example, abamectin, boric acid, or indoxacarb, available from DuPont of Wilmington, Del. In the case of control of ants and cockroaches one might, for example, use a formulation that is about 90% water, about 5% sugar, a small amount of preservative, and a few percent of a toxicant such as boric acid. Toxicants can also be selected which allow the pests to feed and then depart back to a colony to spread the toxicant and cause “colony kill” or trophylaxis. Of course, the specifics of the bait formulations are not critical to the present invention, apart from one being in liquid form and being wickable.
Referring now to
The top wall 31 extends horizontally between the cover 27 and the lower wall 29, and is formed to provide an upwardly open recess for receiving the solid bait 18, an internal compartment for retaining the liquid bait 28, and means for mounting the wicking element 25. Starting from the flange edge 43, the top wall 31 initially angles upward and then extends substantially horizontally across the center of the housing 12. To receive the solid bait 18, a recess 35 in the form of a cup is formed.
A tubular collar portion 34, sized and dimensioned to receive the wicking element 25 in slidable fashion, is formed. It is positioned beneath the flexible activation portion 21. The collar 34 includes a sealed bottom 30 which is preferably weakened such that the bottom can be forced open by the wick 25 to provide access to the liquid reservoir 47. The sealed bottom 30 may simply be thin enough to be easily pierced. Alternatively, the sealed bottom 30 may be scored or otherwise formed with areas of lesser thickness that can part under the force of a downwardly pressed wicking element 25, allowing the sealed bottom to be pierced. As an illustrative example, only, the sealed bottom 30 may be formed with a lesser amount of material at a corner 45 to be therefore weakened.
The base or lower wall 29 extends from the flange edge 41 and extends downward to provide a space between the top wall 31 and the lower wall 29. The base 29 can include a pedestal structure 32 which is provided directly below recess 35, and extends upward toward the recess 35 to support the recess 35 and prevent that portion of the bait station 10 from being easily crushed. The remaining space between the top wall 31 and the lower wall 29 forms a toxicant container/reservoir 47 for receiving the liquid bait 28. The liquid bait reservoir 47 including the liquid toxicant 28 is positioned beneath the collar 34 holding the wick 25, and is separated from the wick 25 by the sealed bottom 30. For shipping and storage the wick 25 is maintained in the collar 34 sealed off from the toxicant 28 by the sealed bottom 30.
Referring now to
It should be appreciated that the seal 30 prevents liquid from entering the wick 25 until the wick 25 is selectively forced down and through the weakened seal 30. Therefore, the liquid bait 28 can be maintained in an enclosed chamber until such time as it is desired to activate the station 10. This prevents evaporation or spillage of the liquid 28 during shipping and storage of the station 10.
Referring next to
When the activation area 21 of the cover is activated to force the wick 25 through the sealed bottom 30 or directly into the liquid container 47, the wick 25 absorbs liquid toxicant 28, e.g. through the unsealed sides 42. The cover 27 is constructed to be bi-stable, or to “oil can” such that the cover 27 becomes fixed in either of the inactive (
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When the bait station 10 is positioned in a room corner with the straight sides paralleling the room, the station can still be accessed by the entrances 16 and 17. Further, if one places the arc side against a room wall, regardless of how it is positioned, at least one of the entrances will always be accessible, and any additional entrances in the straight sides also will be unobstructedly available, as well.
A “blow/fill/seal” manufacturing can be used to form the bait station. In blow/fill/seal, the liquid-containing container is formed using blow-molding techniques, and is provided with a weakened area that is molded into the container in the sealed area 30 that the wick 25 will eventually pierce, as described above. The container can be filled from one end and sealed off. A recess 35 can be molded directly in an upper surface of the base to be later filled with a solid bait 18.
Wick 25 is positioned above the weakened area 30, and a cover 27 is snapped on the container, covering the container and wick. Entrances 16 and 17 are formed in the cover, or between the cover and container, and may include doors through which the target pests can enter.
The cover 27 can flex downwardly when pressed from above, allowing a user to force the wick 25 through the weakened area 30 and down into the liquid 28. Liquid then is transported up to the part of the wick 25 that remains projecting up into the chamber, and the insects can feed on the liquid directly from the wetted wick, or with particularly effective wicks on drool of the liquid off the wick.
Referring next to
Referring now specifically to
These lines could be formed, for example, in a second operation, after the top 31 is thermoformed. Appropriate forming processes can include, for example, pressing a hot or sharp tool into the floor 30 of the collar 34 to create lines that partially penetrate the thickness of the sealed bottom 30. These lines could be provided, for example, as an “X” pattern in the seal 30, a peripheral line partly or even completely around the floor, or any other effective pattern.
Referring now to
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The base could be filled through the opening in the top 31, with the secondary plug 62 then positioned and sealed into place as the final step that closes the base. If the base's top is made first, filled, and then sealed to the bottom, the secondary plug can be fastened to the top by ultrasonic welding, heat sealing, adhesive, or any other standard means. If the secondary plug is assembled to the rest of the base as a final step, use of an adhesive seal is preferred.
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Although preferred embodiments have been shown and described, it will be apparent that various modifications can be made to the features described above. For example, although a dual bait feeding station is shown, it will be apparent that a liquid only station could also be provided using some aspects of the above invention. Furthermore, various features of the feeding stations described above could be combined in various ways to provide alternate constructions. Additionally, the toxicants and baits could be could be varied depending on need (e.g. a rodenticide for rodents).
Still other modifications of the bait station and other aspects of the present invention will become apparent to those skilled in the art from an examination of the above patent specification and drawings. Therefore, the invention is not to be limited to the preferred embodiments only.
The invention provides bait stations suitable for housing and safely shipping multiple types of toxicants, with improved systems for activation of a liquid feeding portion of the device.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. provisional application Ser. No. 60/569,906, filed on May 11, 2004 and entitled “Bait Stations”, which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60569906 | May 2004 | US |