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Eric Vincent, Owner of Mosquito Shield of Boca and Fort Lauderdale
Eric Vincent
Owner & Licensed Pest Control Operator

Eric holds a degree in Pest Control Technology from the University of Florida and carries all five Florida pest control license categories: General Household Pest, Rodent, Lawn & Ornamental, Wood Destroying Organisms, and Public Health (License JB313837). He personally developed Mosquito Shield's proprietary Mosquito Protection Blend and has been treating South Florida properties for over a decade. When he is not in the field, he is behind every piece of content on this site.

UF Pest Control TechnologyLicense JB313837General Household PestRodentLawn & OrnamentalWood Destroying OrganismsPublic Health

Coral Springs is one of Florida's most successful master-planned communities — and that master plan includes a lake, retention pond, or drainage canal within a few blocks of almost every home in the city. That is beautiful infrastructure that happens to be continuous mosquito breeding habitat. As a licensed pest control operator treating properties throughout Broward County, I see Coral Springs' community design reflected in the mosquito calls I get year-round from every neighborhood in the city.

The Coral Springs design problem: The city's master plan integrated 60+ lakes and extensive canal systems for drainage, aesthetics, and recreation. These same water features provide breeding habitat for the Culex and Aedes mosquito species common throughout the city. There is no way to eliminate the breeding source — the goal is continuous suppression at the property level.

Mosquito Pressure by Neighborhood Type

Lake-front and canal-adjacent properties

Highest pressure in Coral Springs. Properties with direct water frontage face continuous breeding from adjacent water. Culex quinquefasciatus (the West Nile vector) is particularly common near these areas. We recommend 10-day treatment intervals for lake-front properties during summer.

Greenbelt corridor properties

Coral Springs' extensive greenbelt system provides excellent adult resting habitat even for properties not directly on water. Mosquitoes breeding in nearby lakes move into greenbelt corridors during the day. Properties backing to greenbelts see elevated pressure even when not on water.

Turtle Run and Wyndham Lakes

Both communities integrate lakes and water features throughout. Golf course lakes in this area hold water year-round and sustain consistent breeding populations. HOA common area treatment is common here.

Interior lots away from water

Lowest pressure in Coral Springs, but still elevated compared to inland neighborhoods in other cities because of the pervasive lake system. Standard 17-day cycle typically works here.

Coral Springs HOAs: Community vs. Individual Treatment

Many Coral Springs communities have HOAs that maintain common areas, lake perimeters, and shared landscaping. Mosquito control works best when it is coordinated — treating individual properties surrounded by untreated common area creates a persistent reinfestation source from the shared spaces.

HOA community program
  • Treats common areas and lake edges
  • Maximizes suppression across the community
  • Reduces reinfestation from shared areas
  • HOA invoiced directly
  • Best overall results
Individual homeowner
  • Available even without HOA program
  • Treats your property footprint
  • Good results within treated area
  • Some reinfestation from adjacent untreated areas
  • Still achieves 60–80% reduction

Coral Springs Zip Codes We Serve

3306533071

Frequently Asked Questions

Why is mosquito pressure high in Coral Springs?

Coral Springs was designed as a master-planned community with lakes, canals, and green space corridors integrated throughout. This infrastructure was built for aesthetic and drainage purposes, but it also provides extensive, year-round mosquito breeding habitat distributed across the entire city. Nearly every neighborhood in Coral Springs is within a few hundred yards of a lake, retention pond, or drainage canal. Add the Everglades proximity along the western edge of the city and you have continuous breeding pressure from multiple directions.

What zip codes in Coral Springs do you serve?

We serve Coral Springs zip codes 33065 and 33071, covering the full city including the Wyndham Lakes, Turtle Run, Cypress Run, Maplewood, Heron Bay adjacent communities, and areas near the Sawgrass corridor.

Do you treat HOA communities and common areas in Coral Springs?

Yes. We work with HOAs and property management companies for common area treatment including community lake perimeters, retention pond edges, greenbelt corridors, and common area landscaping. HOA contracts can be structured as ongoing programs or event-based treatments for community gatherings. Individual homeowners within an HOA can also enroll independently — we treat their property regardless of whether the association has a community-wide program.

How often should Coral Springs properties be treated?

Most Coral Springs properties perform well on our standard 10 to 17 day cycle. Properties directly on or adjacent to community lakes typically need the shorter 10 to 14 day interval during peak season (May through October). Interior lots further from water features may hold adequately on 17 days. We assess each property individually during the first treatment visit and adjust the schedule based on property characteristics and client feedback.

Can mosquito treatment reduce the no-see-um problem in Coral Springs?

Yes. Biting midges (no-see-ums) are common throughout Coral Springs, particularly near the community lakes and wet areas. Our Mosquito Protection Blend reduces no-see-um populations as part of standard mosquito service. Many Coral Springs clients report that no-see-um reduction is one of the most noticeable improvements they experience. No-see-ums breed in the moist organic sediment at the edges of lakes and wet areas — reducing the adult population through barrier treatment is the most effective approach available for residential properties.

Coral Springs Mosquito Control

We treat individual homes and HOA communities throughout Coral Springs on the 10–17 day cycle. No contracts. 7-day money-back guarantee. 5.0 stars · 55 Google reviews.

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