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Bed bugs
Cimex lectularius

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Bed bugs, which are wingless, parasitic insects, have made a huge comeback in recent years. With the development of DDT, they were virtually eliminated and almost nonexistent until the mid-90s, when pest-control companies began baiting (rather than spraying) for cockroaches and ants. As a result of this change in technique, bed bugs were no longer being killed along with roaches and ants. At the same time, immigrants from third-world countries, where resistant strains of bed bugs have developed, started carrying them into major metropolitan areas. In Massachusetts, the Allston-Brighton area of Boston has been particularly affected.

Thought to have originated in the Middle East, bed bugs afflict humans, bats and birds. In their non-blood-engorged state, they measure 1/5th inch long by 1/8th of an inch wide. They are oval-shaped and have flattened bodies.

 

 

Bed bugs can invade structures by being carried into them on clothes, furniture, suitcases, and personal items. Unfortunately, no structure frequented by people is immune from infestation. This includes motels, homes, apartments, condos, movie theatres, and airports, among many other types of buildings.

How can you tell if an infestation is present? Because bed bugs are both nocturnal and small, they aren't usually seen during the day. Many people know when they wake up with itchy swellings on their arms and shoulders. However, some people are not allergic or sensitive to bed bug bites and thus do not experience itching. Other visible clues of infestation are bloodstain smears on beds (most common areas), walls, curtains, and other furniture. Also, brown and black stains from excrement are sometimes observed on surfaces as well, as are egg shells. When infestations are particularly bad, a sweet smell is present.

When first in a structure, bed bugs are found most often in the seams, tufts, and folds of mattresses and daybeds. From there, they spread out and onto bed frames, baseboards, window and door casings, pictures, furniture, loosened wallpaper, and other darks cracks and crevices.
 

 

Bed bugs are prolific breeders. An interesting aspect of their biology is that males can fertilize multiple females within a period of 24 hours. After a female is fertilized, she can lay up to 5 eggs per day by gluing them to surfaces with her own excretions. The eggs then hatch in 6 to 10 days under warm conditions, and longer if it is cool. Bed bugs can live from 6 months to 1 ½ years. Females are able to lay a total of 200 eggs in their lifetimes.

Bed bugs require meals of blood to survive. Young bed bugs, or nymphs, take 3 minutes of feeding to become fully engorged, while adults take 15 minutes to do the same. In the absence of food, bed bugs can live for several hundred days, making them hardy creatures.
 

 

Although preventative measures can be taken for bed bugs, infestations require prompt treatment. Often times, bed bugs spread quickly and thoroughly through apartment buildings, thereby driving up the long-term cost of pest control.

To prevent bed bugs, you can do the following:

-Wash bedding and mattress pads,
-Steam-clean mattresses
-Clean furnishings
-Remove debris from around the house
-Repair cracks in walls
-Caulk windows and doors
-Coat legs of beds with petroleum jelly and double-sided tape to prevent bed bugs from climbing
-Put legs of the bed frame in empty cans or glass jars to create unclimbable vertical surfaces
-Do not pick mattresses and furniture out of the trash in metropolitan areas and be wary of yard sales and other sources of used goods

If you do have an infestation, bed bug treatment requires at least three applications at 6-week intervals because of their life cycle. The first treatment kills the existing nymphs and adults, while the subsequent treatments kill newly hatched nymphs and no-longer dormant adults.

Bed bug bites, although a severe annoyance, do not pose disease risks. Applying antiseptic soap to prevent infection and icepacks to relieve swelling are ways to cope with them. If an infection develops, see your healthcare provider.
 

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