Insect bait
US-2016366872-A1 · Dec 22, 2016 · US
US9603350B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-9603350-B2 |
| Application number | US-201313779990-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | Feb 28, 2013 |
| Priority date | Jun 28, 2007 |
| Publication date | Mar 28, 2017 |
| Grant date | Mar 28, 2017 |
A practical reading order for non-experts. Skip the full description unless you need deep technical detail.
What the patent document calls the invention.
A short plain-language summary of the technical disclosure.
Who owns or filed the patent and who is credited as inventor.
Filing, priority, publication, and grant dates set the timeline.
The legal scope of protection — read this for what is actually claimed.
Technology tags used to group this patent with similar filings.
Prior art links and similar publications in this corpus.
Official abstract text for this publication.
An above-ground termite station includes a container having a base, a side, and a lid together defining an interior space of the container. The side has at least two peripheral openings in spaced relationship with each other about a periphery of the container. Each of the peripheral openings is at least partially closed by a respective access closure that can be selectively removed to provide access to the interior space of the container through the peripheral opening. The container is mountable on an above-ground mounting surface with the base in generally opposed relationship with and abutting against the mounting surface. The lid is positionable between a closed position and an open position to permit access to the interior space of the container. A cartridge is sized and configured for insertion in and removal from the interior space of the container.
Opening claim text (preview).
What is claimed is: 1. A container for an above-ground termite station, the container comprising a base, a side, and a lid together defining an interior space of the container, the container having at least two peripheral openings in spaced relationship with each other about a periphery of the container, each of the peripheral openings extending continuously at least in part in the side and at least in part in the base a predefined distance greater than a thickness of the side, each of the peripheral openings being at least partially closed by a respective access closure that can be selectively removed to provide access to the interior space of the container through the peripheral opening, the container being mountable on an above-ground mounting surface with the base in generally opposed relationship with and abutting against the mounting surface, the lid being positionable between a closed position to close the container during use and an open position to permit access to the interior space of the container, the container and the access closures being made of a material that is inedible to termites. 2. The container set forth in claim 1 wherein the base is tapered adjacent the peripheral openings. 3. The container set forth in claim 1 wherein the side of the container comprises a pair of end panels and a pair of side panels. 4. The container set forth in claim 3 wherein each of the end panels and each of the side panels include a plurality of peripheral openings. 5. The container set forth claim 4 wherein the peripheral openings formed in one end panel are aligned with corresponding peripheral openings in the opposite end panel, and the peripheral openings in one side panel are aligned with corresponding peripheral openings in the opposite side panel. 6. The container set forth in claim 1 wherein each of the access closures is frangibly connected to the container adjacent the respective peripheral opening via a plurality of connecting webs. 7. The container set forth in claim 1 wherein each of the access closures is generally L-shaped in cross-section having an upstanding portion that closes a portion of the peripheral opening in the side of the container and a base portion that closes a portion of the peripheral opening in the base of the container. 8. The container set forth in claim 1 wherein each of the access closure is formed integrally with the container. 9. The container set forth in claim 1 wherein the lid is releasably secured to the container in the closed position by a securement arrangement, the lid being configured for repeated securement to and removal from the container. 10. An above-ground termite station for detecting and controlling termites above ground in an operating configuration of the termite station, the termite station comprising: a container having a base, a side, a top opening, and a lid coupled to the side and configured to close the top opening, the base, the side, and the lid together defining an interior space of the container, the side having at least two peripheral openings in spaced relationship with each other about a periphery of the container, each of the peripheral openings being at least partially closed by a respective access closure that can be selectively removed to provide access to the interior space of the container through the peripheral opening, the container being mountable on an above-ground mounting surface with the base in generally opposed relationship with and abutting against the mounting surface, the lid being positionable between a closed position and an open position to permit access to the interior space of the container, the container and the access closures being made of a material that is inedible to termites; and a cartridge sized and configured for insertion in and removal from the interior space of the container, the open position of the lid allowing insertion and removal of the cartridge-through the top opening. 11. The above-ground termite station set forth in claim 10 wherein each of the peripheral openings extends from the side to the base. 12. The above-ground termite station set forth in claim 11 wherein each of the peripheral openings extends at least in part in the side and at least in part in the base a predefined distance greater than a thickness of the side. 13. The above-ground termite station set forth in claim 11 wherein the base is tapered adjacent the peripheral openings. 14. The above-ground termite station set forth in claim 10 wherein the side of the container comprises a pair of end panels and a pair of side panels. 15. The above-ground termite station set forth in claim 14 wherein each of the end panels and each of the side panels include a plurality of peripheral openings. 16. The above-ground termite station set forth claim 15 wherein the peripheral openings formed in one end panel are aligned with corresponding peripheral openings in the opposite end panel, and the peripheral openings in one side panel are aligned with corresponding peripheral openings in the opposite side panel. 17. The above-ground termite station set forth in claim 10 wherein each of the access closures is frangibly connected to the container adjacent the respective peripheral opening via a plurality of connecting webs. 18. The above-ground termite station set forth in claim 10 wherein each of the access closures is generally L-shaped in cross-section having an upstanding portion that closes a portion of the peripheral opening in the side of the container and a base portion that closes a portion of the peripheral opening in the base of the container. 19. The above-ground termite station set forth in claim 10 wherein each of the access closure is formed integrally with the container.
Assembling or joining · CPC title
Crawling insects · CPC title
Poisoning insects using bait stations (A01M1/10 takes precedence) · CPC title
combined with devices for monitoring insect presence, e.g. termites (bait stations A01M1/2005; detecting other animals in a given area A01M31/002) · CPC title
for crawling insects · CPC title
Related publications grouped by family.
Answers are generated from the same data shown on this page.