Latest Articles
Avoiding an infestation, spending a co-ops funds and dealing with leftover furniture.
By RONDA KAYSEN
The importance of a contract; co-op rules for renting; and uncovering bedbug history.
By RONDA KAYSEN
A survey found that a single recent review that mentions bedbugs lowers hotel room values by $38 for business travelers and $23 for leisure travelers.
By MATT KRUPNICK
A surprising genetic diversity has been discovered among the citys bedbugs, which the scientists tracked through DNA samples that were taken from the subway system.
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
A building awning and a bus stop intersect; bedbug advice; and a conflict in a co-op over access to an apartment for repairs.
By RONDA KAYSEN
Why cant we all just get along?
Bennett gets a flashback, everyone gets itchy.
By LIBBY HILL
A look at the biological and cultural history of bedbugs.
By MARLENE ZUK
A new mattress company, Newton Rest, has replaced springs and foam with washable casings made of a spongy polymer.
By TIM McKEOUGH
New research indicates that some bedbugs are well on their way to becoming a new species.
By CARL ZIMMER
Misinformation over a bedbug infestation; difficulty in obtaining a buildings financial statements; and a question about subletting are addressed.
By RONDA KAYSEN
The musical Bedbugs!!! finds humor in mutant insects that terrorize New York City.
By NEIL GENZLINGER
This weeks subjects include bedbug infestations; brokers who sit on co-op boards; and rules governing subletting rent-stabilized apartments.
By RONDA KAYSEN
Metropolitan Diary: A group of young men were trying to take discarded furniture despite a sign warning of bedbugs.
By LUCY STONE
Fire officials say a New York City woman set off an explosion by her use of so-called bug bombs, which are highly flammable.
By MARC SANTORA
An entomologist from the American Museum of Natural History is accepting questions from City Room readers about the insects, which are now emerging from underground.
By THE NEW YORK TIMES
A group of American scientists have been studying how to replicate properties found in certain types of bean leaves that can capture, or at least slow down, the pests.
By FELICITY BARRINGER
Researchers tracked how bedbugs would get stuck on certain types of leaves.
Researchers tracked how bed bugs reacted to a synthetic surface designed to impede their movement.
Avoiding an infestation, spending a co-ops funds and dealing with leftover furniture.
By RONDA KAYSEN
The importance of a contract; co-op rules for renting; and uncovering bedbug history.
By RONDA KAYSEN
A survey found that a single recent review that mentions bedbugs lowers hotel room values by $38 for business travelers and $23 for leisure travelers.
By MATT KRUPNICK
A surprising genetic diversity has been discovered among the citys bedbugs, which the scientists tracked through DNA samples that were taken from the subway system.
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
A building awning and a bus stop intersect; bedbug advice; and a conflict in a co-op over access to an apartment for repairs.
By RONDA KAYSEN
Why cant we all just get along?
Bennett gets a flashback, everyone gets itchy.
By LIBBY HILL
A look at the biological and cultural history of bedbugs.
By MARLENE ZUK
A new mattress company, Newton Rest, has replaced springs and foam with washable casings made of a spongy polymer.
By TIM McKEOUGH
New research indicates that some bedbugs are well on their way to becoming a new species.
By CARL ZIMMER
Misinformation over a bedbug infestation; difficulty in obtaining a buildings financial statements; and a question about subletting are addressed.
By RONDA KAYSEN
The musical Bedbugs!!! finds humor in mutant insects that terrorize New York City.
By NEIL GENZLINGER
This weeks subjects include bedbug infestations; brokers who sit on co-op boards; and rules governing subletting rent-stabilized apartments.
By RONDA KAYSEN
Metropolitan Diary: A group of young men were trying to take discarded furniture despite a sign warning of bedbugs.
By LUCY STONE
Fire officials say a New York City woman set off an explosion by her use of so-called bug bombs, which are highly flammable.
By MARC SANTORA
An entomologist from the American Museum of Natural History is accepting questions from City Room readers about the insects, which are now emerging from underground.
By THE NEW YORK TIMES
A group of American scientists have been studying how to replicate properties found in certain types of bean leaves that can capture, or at least slow down, the pests.
By FELICITY BARRINGER
Researchers tracked how bedbugs would get stuck on certain types of leaves.
Researchers tracked how bed bugs reacted to a synthetic surface designed to impede their movement.
Original post:
Bedbugs - The New York Times