Daily Archives: April 22, 2012

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Bed bugs biting more in Southern Arizona

TUCSON - Bed bug cases are on the rise in Pima County.

The Pima County Health Department investigated 67 claims in 2010. They have investigated 34 so far in 2012, which is on pace for a 50% increase over the past 2 years. Data on how many investigations turned up positive were not immediately available.

Local pest control companies also say they are busy with the bugs.

"It doesn't matter if you're clean, poor, rich," Stephen Thompson with Arizona Pest Control said, "they're a hitch-hiking bug and they'll get you."

Arizona Pest Control reports a 5% increase in calls for bed bugs this year.

Only about 20% of their calls turn into a treatment job.

"Cost is always first and foremost," Thompson said, "and secondly, is the inconvenience of not being able to sleep in that particular room."

Treatment can range from a few hundred to a few thousand dollars.

They use a combination of chemicals and heat to kill the bugs.

The heat machine they use cost about $15,000. It will increase the temperature of a room above 140 degrees.

Excerpt from:
Bed bugs biting more in Southern Arizona

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Of Mosquitoes and Men: Entomology Shop tames the wilds at Langley

Slithering and sliding, creeping and crawling, flying, jumping or stalking; it doesn't matter, the folks at the Langley Air Force Base entomology shop have it covered.

Posters of the anatomy of strange bugs and other crawling creatures cover the walls of the small office tucked away behind Eaglewood Golf Course. An indoor beehive and living snakes and other critters inhabit the workplace.

This isn't an average Air Force office.

James Will, the 633rd Civil Engineer Squadron Entomology Foreman has shown the innovative beehive to the local community so beekeepers can protect their swarms from the Dibrom pesticide sprayed around Langley AFB.

Want to see it? No problem, said Will. The team keeps a host of animals in the shop as shop pets, including Sammy the bearded dragon, a species of lizard, as the shop's unofficial mascot.

However, a trip may not be for the faint of heart. A Ball Python, Rosey Tarantula, California king snake, broad-headed skink and five Madagascar Hissing Roaches are all contained in the shop.

Senior Airman Steven Peterson, a 633rd CES pest control specialist, said that along with biannual visits to the youth center, the shop's critters are available for viewing and even handling in some cases.

Pest control and any related public health concerns also fall under their area of responsibility. From outbreaks of bed bugs to pesky ants, a call to CES can get the base's pest problems solved.

Not surprisingly, the shop has received some strange calls.

We catch some pretty crazy stuff, said Peterson. He said the team has responded to calls about snakes in Airman dormitories to raccoons in the rafters of buildings.

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Of Mosquitoes and Men: Entomology Shop tames the wilds at Langley

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