OneGuard® Multi MoA Concentrate

Use Sites

Food-Handling, Indoor, Outdoor, Perimeter

View full use sites: Download Label

Form

Concentrate

Contact us or Find a Distributor for Pricing

OneGuard Multi MoA Concentrate combines the power of a knockdown agent, long-lasting insecticide, synergist and IGR in one single product with controlled-release technology. The result is highly effective knockdown, kill and long-lasting control of mosquitoes and listed flying and crawling pests. Reference the product label for the full list of pests killed or controlled.

Primary Uses

  • Flies
  • Spiders

View All Pests

Features & Benefits
  • Kills Aedes, Anopheles and Culex mosquitoes
  • Kills mosquitoes that may transmit West Nile virus, Chikungunya virus and Zika virus
  • Long-lasting control of mosquitoes
  • Kills fleas and ticks
  • Convenient all-in-one product
  • Saves you time in the field when compared to tank-mixing multiple products
  • Provides knockdown of mosquitoes
  • Contains NyGuard Insect Growth Regulator
  • Reduces mosquito populations by preventing reproduction
  • Two modes of action, combating mosquitoes at two different life stages

OneGuard® Documentation

No need to stand guard. Randy McCarty of ABC Home & Commercial Services and MGK team up to tackle mosquitoes.

“The acceptance of OneGuard by the technicians was noticed almost immediately. They loved the fact that they did not have to mix two or three products to their tanks to get control. We also noticed that the material seemed to flow out of the backpacks in a way that provided better coverage of the foliage.” – Randy McCarty, ABC Home & Commercial Services, Texas PDF Link

OneGuard® FAQs

  • 1-quart bottle
  • 64-ounce bottle
  • 1 gallon bottle
  • 330-gallon drum
    Please contact your distributor for availability.

The first three stages of the mosquito lifecycle (egg, larva, pupa) are aquatic. Therefore, common places include anywhere susceptible to stagnant water:

  • Bird baths
  • Clogged rain gutters
  • Old discarded tires
  • Kiddie pools
  • Flowerpots
  • Saucers under potted plants
  • Wheelbarrows or garden carts
  • Watering cans or buckets
  • Ornamental ponds
  • Wood piles
  • Children’s toys
  • Tree holes
  • Rain barrels
  • Leaf piles

Aedes aegypti and Aedes albopictus differ in a few key ways that affect their control strategies: • Small container breeders • Only fly a few hundred meters from emergent sites • Lay individual eggs usually near the waterline • Eggs are laid in multiple sites (skip-oviposition); typically 100-200 eggs per batch and five batches laid in a lifetime • Eggs can last for years and remain viable • Active daytime biters although they will also bite at dawn and dusk

chevron-right