Mosquito Control in Collier Manor, Pompano Beach
Collier Manor is a well-established west Pompano Beach residential neighborhood with proximity to the C-14 Canal drainage corridor, mature tropical landscaping, and the broader SFWMD drainage system that connects central Broward to the Everglades. The combination of regional drainage canals, established lot vegetation, and Pompano's high post-rain mosquito surge makes year-round protection essential in this community.
Kill
All-natural MPB formula with Rain Shield polymer. Contact kill plus 10–17 day residual in Collier Manor's established residential vegetation. No neonicotinoids.
Mask
Natural plant oils block CO₂ detection — masking you from Culex from the C-14 Canal drainage and Aedes from container breeding in Collier Manor's mature landscaping and adjacent retention areas.
Repel
Perimeter treatment drives canal and drainage-sourced mosquitoes from your property boundary — protecting yards, pools, and outdoor areas in this established west Pompano community.
Collier Manor Mosquito Pressure Factors
The C-14 Canal is one of the primary east-west drainage arteries of central Broward County, running through the Pompano Beach area and connecting to the regional SFWMD flood control system. This canal and its associated drainage tributaries generate significant Culex quinquefasciatus breeding pressure throughout Pompano Beach's west-central areas, including Collier Manor. Post-storm water level rises in the C-14 system produce the most intense Culex breeding events in the neighborhood — the same pattern that drives mosquito surge events throughout central and west Pompano Beach communities. West Nile Virus risk is highest when Culex populations peak following major wet season rain events.
West Pompano Beach communities like Collier Manor contain drainage infrastructure — retention ponds, roadside swales, and detention basins — that supplement the main canal network as mosquito breeding sites. These areas are often managed by the municipality but are not always treated for mosquito larvae on a schedule intensive enough to prevent breeding between treatment cycles. During the June–October wet season, these retention areas fill rapidly after rain events and produce Culex breeding populations that extend biting pressure throughout the neighborhood for 7–10 days after each significant rainfall.
Collier Manor's established residential landscaping features the ornamental tropical plants, mature hedges, and shade vegetation common to west Pompano neighborhoods developed over the past several decades. Bromeliads (which hold water in their center wells indefinitely), ornamental palms, bird-of-paradise, and container plantings all provide Aedes aegypti and Aedes albopictus breeding sites within property boundaries. These daytime-biting Aedes species add to the dusk/night Culex pressure from canals, creating the all-day biting pressure that Collier Manor residents experience during peak season. Professional barrier spray targets the foliage where adult mosquitoes rest between feedings, creating residual kill and repellency that directly reduces this on-property pressure.
Free Collier Manor Assessment
Eric Vincent — FL License JB313837. West Pompano and central Broward specialist. All-natural MPB formula with Rain Shield. No contracts, 7-day guarantee.