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Latest Bed Bug Incidents and Infestations

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Diatomaceous Earth Crawling Insect Control for Bed Bugs

(CRAWLING INSECT CONTROL is Perma-Guards EPA approved Diatomaceous Earth used when doing pest control on any type of insect. EPA Reg. No. 73729-1-67197)

(Both Food Grade Diatomaceous Earth and Crawling Insect Control Diatomaceous Earth are 100%Organic.The Crawling Insect ControlDEhas the approved EPA label on it for killing insects.)

Kill Bed Bugs Naturally

Diatomaceous earth Crawling Insect Control for Bed Bugsand a couple of plastic applicators (one to sprinkle powder and the other to puff powder) is all you need to get rid of bed bugs organically. No toxic chemicals. No exterminator fees. No need to move out of the house during the process. Full instructions for use ofCRAWLING INSECT CONTROLdiatomaceous earthto kill bed bugs are on this page, and ordering is easy and inexpensive.

NOW IN STOCK BEDBUG INTERCEPTORS JUST PLACE UNDER BED LEGS

To Start: You can start with CRAWLING INSECT CONTROL diatomaceous earth, one refillable PD-001 plastic dispenser used to sprinkle the powder ($4.00), and one Pest Pistol Powder Duster to puff the powder into crevices ($8.99). When transferring theCRAWLING INSECT CONTROL diatomaceous earthfrom the original container, do not try to pour it. Use a large spoon or scoop. Being a fine powder, DE shakes well from the shaker, but does not pour like sand or sugar.

Crawling Insect Control diatomaceous earthwill not only kill the bed bugs you have, but will do it without chemicals. General Application Introduction: Bed bugs cannot fly, so make sure bed is away from the wall and there is no bedding touching the floor. Surround each of the 4 legs of the bed with CRAWLING INSECT CONTROL diatomaceous earth--this will kill them as they try to get on the bed the only way possible. Dismantle bed. Use CRAWLING INSECT CONTROL diatomaceous earthin joints, crevices and where rungs are inserted. See that all interior areas are dusted. Dust mattressesespecially folds and edges. All cracks and crevices in the bedroom should be treated. Remove electrical outlet covers and puff someCRAWLING INSECT CONTROL diatomaceous earthinside the walls. The "Pest Pistol" works great for this. Keep this routine up for several days until there are no more bed bugs.

"HOW TO" INSTRUCTIONS FOR BED BUG APPLICATION FURTHER DOWN-PAGE.

Remember - Bed bugs are not your fault. You can pick up bed bugs from hotel rooms and infected places and innocently bring bed bugs home. To kill bed bugs naturally andeliminate bed bugs organically use CRAWLING INSECT CONTROL diatomaceous earth. You can spend hundreds of dollars on exterminators to get rid of Bed Bugs with dangerous chemicals and poisons, or you can protect the health of your family and pets with CRAWLING INSECT CONTROL diatomaceous earth.

The microscopicCRAWLING INSECT CONTROL diatomaceous earth particles are deadly to the Bed Bug. The particles attach themselves to the bed bugs body and physically "scratch them to death!" Because it kills them mechanically, they cannot become immune to it like they do with so many of the chemicals today. Because it's a mineral, once you put it down it stays there and keeps working. You may sweep it up as you get rid of the dead Bed Bugs, butCRAWLING INSECT CONTROL diatomaceous earthdoesn't loose power over time.

HOW TO APPLY DE TO KILL BED BUGS

Bed Bug Bites The words "bed bugs" are enough to send most of us running with skin all aquiver at the thought of little blood-sucking creatures crawling all over us as we sleep. These little bugs are pests, to be sure, and they can be difficult to get rid of once they have decided to make your house their home, hiding during the daylight hours in cracks and crevasses where they are almost impossible to excise.

Because of this, you may not realize right away that bed bugs are the source of the annoying sores on your legs when you wake up in the mornings. Bed bugs are attracted by both warmth and the presence of carbon dioxide, which is what we exhale in breathing. The bugs climb up onto your skin and pierce you with two hollow tubes, one of which injects anti-coagulants and anesthetics. The other tube is used to withdraw your blood, feeding for about five minutes before returning to their hiding places.

There may be a cluster of bites instead of singular ones when you awake, and this is typically caused by disturbing the bugs while they feed, causing them to detach and return to feed momentarily. A well fed bedbug can live anywhere from four to six months, while a dormant one might live without feeding for up to 18 months.

The bites can be found just about anywhere on your body, with exposed bits of skin being the preferred feeding ground for the bugs, making your face a target along with arms and legs. The bites cannot be felt at first, but as the anesthetics wear off and the skin begins to react to the injections, the bites can make themselves felt minutes or even hours after the bedbugs have returned to hiding.

If you have bedbugs, your infestation can get worse very quickly since a female bedbug can lay up to five eggs per day, and up to around 500 eggs in her lifetime. Since it takes only five weeks for hatched nymphs to grow to maturity, your problems could expand exponentially within a relatively short period of time, and infestations can be hard to control.

The History of Bed Bugs: Bed bugs have been around for centuries. Documentation reaching as far back as the 17th century has told about infestations of bed bugs. In the United States, bed bugs were very common until about World War II. With the introduction of such pesticides as DDT, a great decrease in infestations occurred. It was not until the last decade that reported cases gave an indication of a possible rise in bed bug infestations.

Authorities believe that the rise in reports can be attributed to the extermination tactics of pest control today. Today, many pest control experts use baiting tactics for in-home infestations of such things as ants, roaches, and spiders. These baiting tactics work well for their intended subjects, but since bed bugs are blood feeders, they do not fall for the baiting tricks used. This change in exterminating technique has contributed to the rise in reported bed bug infestations.

Identifying a bed bug: Adult bed bugs are generally flattened and reddish brown in color. They resemble apple seeds in appearance and size. Newly hatched nymphs look very much like adults. Although they are almost colorless, they gain their reddish brown color as they mature. The adult bed bug may lay up to 5 eggs daily. These eggs are almost impossible for humans to see with the naked eye, and resemble a flake of dust on a dark surface.

A quick look at the facts: Bed bugs are small bloodsucking insects that feed on humans and other warm-blooded animals. Bed Bugs often hide in mattresses but they can also survive in furniture, behind wall coverings and pictures/paintings. They will crawl and nest inside tiny crevices anywhere indoors, as long as there is a source of food (blood).While bed bugs do not transmit any pathogens or diseases, their bites usually result in swollen red, itchy welts. Bed bugs are typically nocturnal insects (they creep about at nighttime).

There are other types of bed bugs including the bat bug, the chimney swift bug and the swallow bug. All of these relatives survive on blood feeding. However these secondary parasites thrive on either bats or birds as their primary victims.

Small reddish or brownish spots on one's linens are often the first sign of an infestation. These spots are the bed bug's droppings. Another sign is swelling where you've been bitten.

Bed bugs are not necessarily a sign of unkempt/dirty homes or buildings.

A female bed bug can lay as many as 500 eggs during her lifetime.

Bed bugs are less than 1/4 inch in length, flat, and oval-shaped like; a bit like a sunflower seed.

Bed bugs can go up to a year without a blood meal.

A bed bug's saliva features an anesthetic to numb the pain as it's biting. It also contains anti-coagulant to keep the blood of its meal host flowing.

Furniture that is inspected should be inspected thoroughly. Remove "pull out" drawers and inspect any and all small creases and openings.

Taking apart furniture is often advised if you want to get at the source of the bed bug infestation. Doing this in a garage or outdoors is preferred, if possible.

The covering on the bottom of a box spring bed should be taken off for inspection and treatment measures. If the infestation is severe, you may want to dispose of the mattress.

Bed bugs are many times also found underneath the edges of carpets, where ceilings and walls meet, behind light switch covers and outlets, in clothes, inside appliances, and behind baseboards and carpet stays.

Itching: There are a number of things you can do to stop the itching.

Bed bug dangers: When a bed bug bites, it injects an anti-blood clotting chemical into the skin. Some people may actually be allergic to bed bugs, and the degree of itching is determined by how allergic a person is. If you notice any signs of infection, call your physician IMMEDIATELY. Scratching the bites can also result in an infection. If you do not get an infection, the bites are simply an irritating nuisance. It may take a few weeks for the itching to subside and for the welts to disappear. BED BUGS DO NOT CARRY PATHOGENS as mosquitoes or ticks do!

Diatomaceous Earth FAQ: http://www.earthworkshealth.com/Diatomaceous-Earth-FAQ.php

PERMA-GUARD CRAWLING INSECT CONTROL---EPA REGISTERED AND APPROVED! EPA REG. NO. 73729-1-67197 EPA ESTABLISHMENT NO. 67197-UT-001

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Diatomaceous Earth Crawling Insect Control for Bed Bugs

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bed bugs removal treatment in New Jersey – Pest ID

Freehold: Corporate office Phone: 800-362-2282 Fax: 732-577-1263

Flanders: Phone: 973-584-2552 Fax: 973-584-2455

Somerville: Phone: 908-730-6565 Fax: 908-823-0354

Clover Mites Clover mites sometimes invade homes in enormous numbers, in early spring and late autumn, overrunning floors, walls, drapes, window sills and furniture, even occasionally getting into beds and clothing. They may become troublesome in hospitals, nursing homes, apartments, food processing facilities, etc.

Bag Worms Bagworm larvae damage their hosts by feeding on the foliage. Heavy infestations can completely defoliate small plants. Defoliation usually kills hosts such as red cedar and other junipers.

Fleas The cat flea, is one of the most abundant and widespread species of flea on Earth.

Ticks Ticks are blood-feeding parasites that are often found in tall grass where they will wait to attach to a passing host.

Gypsy Moths The hatching of gypsy moth eggs coincides with budding of most hardwood trees. When population numbers are dense larvae feed continuously day and night until the foliage of the host tree is stripped. Then they crawl in search of new sources of food.

Eastern Tent Caterpillar Eastern tent caterpillar nests are commonly found on wild cherry, apple, and crabapple, but may be found on hawthorn, maple, cherry, peach, pear and plum as well. While tent caterpillars can nearly defoliate a tree when numerous, the tree will usually recover and put out a new crop of leaves. The silken nests are built in the crotches of limbs and can become quite large.

Yellow Jackets Wasps become a problem only when they threaten to sting humans. One of the most troublesome of the social wasps is the yellow jacket. Yellow jackets, especially ground and cavity-nesting ones, tend to defend their nests vigorously when disturbed. Defensive behavior increases as the season progresses and colony populations become larger while food becomes scarcer.

Bees Bees play an important role in pollinating flowering plants, and are the major type of pollinator in ecosystems that contain flowering plants. Removal by recommended bee keepers is most common control method.

Bald-faced Hornets They are best known for their large football-shaped paper nest, which they build in the spring for raising their young. These nests can sometimes reach 3 feet tall. Bald-faced hornets are protective of their nests and will sting repeatedly if the nest is physically disturbed. They are more aggressive than both wasps and yellow jackets.

Cicada Killer Wasps These are large, solitary, ground dwelling, predatory wasps. They are so named because they hunt cicadas and provision their nests with them. The cicada killer wasps attract attention due to their large size, the burrows that they dig in home lawns, and their buzzing flights over the lawn. In spite of their large size, the wasps usually ignore people but they can give a painful sting if bothered.

Subterranean Termites The eastern subterranean termite is the most widespread termite in the U.S., found throughout the eastern, Midwestern and southern states. The far-reaching distribution of this pest leads experts to estimate it causes more structural damage nationwide than any other termite species.

Carpenter Bees Carpenter bees tunnel into wood to lay their eggs. Bare, unpainted or weathered softwoods are preferred especially redwood, cedar, cypress and pine. Painted or pressure-treated wood is much less susceptible to attack. Common nesting sites include eaves, window trim, fascia boards, siding, wooden shakes, decks and outdoor furniture.

Carpenter Ants Carpenter ants, vary in size and color but are usually large (- inch) and blackish. Besides being objectionable by their presence, carpenter ants damage wood by hollowing it out for nesting. They excavate galleries in wood which have a smooth, sandpapered appearance. Wood which has been damaged by carpenter ants contains no mud-like material, as is the case with termites.

Wood Destroying Beetles There are a number of small beetles that attack wood. Most attack wood that is alive (i.e., trees) or green lumber,) but a few will attack seasoned wood, like furniture, flooring, paneling, and stored lumber.

Household Ants Ants are among the most prevalent pests in households. They are also found in restaurants, hospitals, offices, warehouses, and other buildings where they can find food and water.

Carpenter Ants Several species of carpenter ants are capable of damaging wood in buildings and other structures. They will enter buildings in search of nesting sites or moisture and can build nests containing several thousand ants. Typically, the nests they construct indoors are satellites of a larger, parent nest located outside in a live or dead tree, a woodpile, or landscaping materials.

Bed Bugs Bed bugs are small parasitic insects. The term usually refers to species that prefer to feed on human blood. In the developed world, bed bugs were largely eradicated as pests in the early 1940s, however have increased in prevalence since about 1995. Because infestation of human habitats has been on the increase, bed bug bites and related conditions have been on the rise as well

Mice The house mouse is remarkably well-adapted for living year-round in homes, food establishments and other structures. Homeowners are especially likely to notice mice during winter. Once mice become established inside a home, they can be extremely difficult to control. Although most people consider mice less objectionable than rats, mice are more common and cause significantly more damage.

Rats The Norway rat, also called the brown rat or sewer rat, is a destructive pest found in urban and suburban neighborhoods. These rodents eat and contaminate food, damage buildings and other property by their gnawing and burrowing, and may spread diseases that affect people and pets. Norway rats are husky, brownish rodents that weigh about 11 ounces.

Voles A vole is a small rodent resembling a mouse but with a stouter body, a shorter hairy tail, a slightly rounder head, smaller ears and eyes. Voles will often eat succulent root systems and will burrow under plants or ground cover they are particularly fond of and eat away until the plant is dead. Bulbs in the ground are another favorite target for voles.

Household Flies These pests breed in animal wastes and decaying organic material from which they can pick up bacteria and viruses that may cause human diseases. In addition, adult stable flies (sometimes called "biting flies") feed on mammalian blood and can give a painful bite.

Drain Flies Drain flies sometimes appear suddenly and mysteriously, becoming a nuisance in both homes and sewage disposal plants. Adult flies may become so numerous indoors that they congregate at windows, darken lamp shades at night, fall into food and accumulate around showers, bathtubs, sinks and floor drains, especially in the basement.

Bottle Flies Bottle flies usually have a metallic blue or green color or both on the thorax and abdomen. Flies can breed on dead rodents and birds in attics or wall voids of houses. They usually breed in meat scraps, animal excrement, and decaying animal matter around houses. The adult flies are quite active inside and are strongly attracted to light.

Fruit Flies Fruit flies are nuisance pests and contaminators of food. Fruit flies usually breed in fruit, dirty garbage containers, or slime in drains.

Stink Bugs Most stink bugs are herbivorous and use their piercing and sucking mouthparts to feed on plant juices. When handled or disturbed, stink bugs are able to secrete a bad-smelling, bad-tasting fluid from pores on the sides of their bodies. If stink bugs have already entered a home or building, a vacuum cleaner can aid in the removal of live or dead stink bugs. The bag must be removed to prevent odor from permeating the area.

Boxelders Boxelder bugs are primarily a nuisance because they enter homes and other buildings, often in large numbers. Fortunately, they do not bite people and are essentially harmless to property. When abundant, they can stain walls, curtains, and other surfaces with their excrement. Adult boxelder bugs are about 1/2-inch long, black with orange or red markings, including three stripes.

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Bed Bug Control & Prevention | Plunketts Pest Control

Do Bed Bugs Make You Anxious?

Bed bugs have become a major threat to residential and commercial property owners in our area and across the U.S. These pests were dormant for several decades due to the widespread use of DDT, but their resurgence has taken off and there isnt an end in sight. Entomologists speculate that the reemergence of bed bugs may be due to increased international travel, the ban on DDT and a higher resistance to currently used pesticides. Bed bugs pose a significant risk and challenge to homeowners and businesses alike.

As far as bed bug treatment goes, the fastest and most effective way to eradicate bed bugs is through heat treatment. The only way to ensure the problem has been solved is to eliminate every last bed bug in your home. This can prove to be difficult as bed bugs hide in small, improbable crevices (not just in beds), so you need to treat everything with intensive heat. Plunketts has one of the largest heat treatment fleets in the industry. We can handle large heat treatment jobs in a single day that others might take weeks to complete. The fewer opportunities you give bed bugs to spread, the better.

An advanced technology known as Thermal Remediation (heat treatment) is a safe, efficient, and highly effective solution for eradicating bed bugs. Specialized mobile heating units are used within bed bug infested areas to heat and maintain air temperatures between 120F to 140F the temperature range that kills all stages of bed bugs, from eggs to adults.

Bed Bugs 101 Get the answers to all your questions about these pesky pests. Heat Treatment Heat treatment is an effective and quick method to solve your problem. Learn more about it here. K9 Inspection Early awareness of an infestation is crucial to keeping the cost of treatment down. Our K9 Inspection service does just this.

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Bugs that Look Like Bed Bugs | bed-bugs.com

While the main insect of concern in the genus Cimex is the common bed bug, which prefers human blood, there are other insects related to bed bugs which are similar in appearance and habit. It is important to obtain a positive identification if there is any question as to the identity of the pest. The tropical bed bug is closely related to the common bed bug in that it prefers to feed on humans; however, the tropical bed bug is not as widespread as the common bed bug.

There are several species of insects which resemble the bed bug but have other preferred food sources. When the normal food source is unavailable, though, these insects might feed on humans. Some of these pests might not feed on humans but might bite until the insect realizes that the food source is not preferred.

Within the family Cimicidae, which the genus Cimex is a member, there are species which are not normally found in human dwellings but might be accidentally introduced via hosts, migration from former feeding areas, or by transporting by humans.

European Swallow Bug The European swallow bug feeds on a broader list of birds than just swallows and will enter buildings and feed on humans if their normal bird hosts are unavailable. Its preferred hosts, swallows, may have nests which become infested by swallow bugs. Swallows might abandon nests, but the swallow bugs can emerge in warm weather in anticipation of the return of the swallows. If these birds do not return, the swallow bugs will move and can find their way into the living space of a home, where they feed on humans.

Eastern Bat Bug The eastern bat bug is a common insect in attics or where bats are present and may easily work their way into a structure and feed on humans. The eastern bat bug, found mostly in the eastern part of the United States, is probably the most common insect easily mistaken for a bed bug. There are several characteristics which distinguish the bat bug from the bed bug and these can be easily observed using a hand lens or microscope. There is a western bat bug, but there are no documented cases of this insect attacking humans, even if they infest homes. Prior to the recent common bed bug resurgence, the bat bug was probably the most common insect related to a bed bug that humans encountered. The bat bug experience has since been overshadowed by the common bed bug. The chimney swift bug lives in nests of the namesake birds and will bite humans if they have no other source of food; however, they usually do not cause massive infestations.

The Poultry Bug The poultry bug (Haemotosiphon inodorus) is found near birds and is a common pest of chicken and duck houses. These bugs hide near where the birds roost and will emerge at night to feed. If humans remain in close proximity with poultry, these bugs can feed on humans, although their preferred food source is poultry and fowl.

Picture of bugs that resemble bed bugs: From left to right, swallow bug (Oeciacus vicarius), bed bug (Cimex lectularius) and bat bug (Afrocimex constrictus)

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Scientists Use Bed Bugs’ Own Chemistry Against Them

SCIENTISTS USE BED BUGS OWN CHEMISTRY AGAINST THEM

COLUMBUS, Ohio Scientists here have determined that combining bed bugs own chemical signals with a common insect control agent makes that treatment more effective at killing the bugs.

The researchers found that stirring up the bed bugs by spraying their environment with synthetic versions of their alarm pheromones makes them more likely to walk through agents called desiccant dusts, which kill the bugs by making them highly susceptible to dehydration.

A blend of two pheromones applied in concert with a silica gel desiccant dust proved to be the most lethal combination.

In the past decade, bed bugs have become an increasing problem in industries ranging from agriculture and housing to travel and hospitality, so much so that the Environmental Protection Agency hosted a National Bed Bug Summit in April of this year.

The species, Cimes lectularius, also is developing resistance to the insecticides approved to spray infested areas, treatments that belong to a group of compounds called pyrethroids.

Desiccant dusts that are sprinkled in infested areas, however, are among the oldest forms of insect control and are still considered effective killers as long as the bugs walk through them.

Once we put the alarm pheromone in the places bed bugs hide, boom, they instantly started moving around and moving through the desiccant dust, said Joshua Benoit, lead author of the study and a doctoral candidate in entomology studying under David Denlinger at Ohio State University.

Consistently, the addition of a pheromone blend to desiccant dust was more effective than adding either chemical by itself or by using desiccant dust alone.

The research is published in the current issue of the Journal of Medical Entomology.

The two bed bug alarm pheromone ingredients are known as (E)-2-hexenal and (E)-2-octenal. When bed bugs are disturbed or excited, they secrete these two pheromones and tend to want to move around.

While some pheromones are known to attract species for reproductive purposes, these particular pheromones act more as a repellent, Benoit explained.

These pheromones also can be bought from any chemical company. Theyre well-established chemicals, are easy to make in the lab, and are readily available, he said.

Two types of desiccant dusts were used in the experiments: diatomaceous earth, a naturally occurring, chalky substance, and a compound called Dri-die, made from a silica gel. Desiccant dusts are designed to disturb the bed bugs cuticle, particularly the waxy outer layer on insects that allows bugs to stay hydrated. Without the waxy protection, insects are more prone to dry up and die.

The researchers first tested the chemical combination on five bed bugs at a time for 10-minute exposures in petri dishes. They tested both types of desiccant dusts as well as each pheromone component alone and in a blend more typical of natural secretion.

Bed bugs exposed to Dri-die and a blend of pheromones lost water at a much faster rate than did bed bugs treated with the desiccant dust alone. The scientists found that bed bugs exposed to Dri-die alone lost 21 percent more water than untreated control bugs. Water loss nearly doubled with either (E)-2-hexenal or (E)-2-octenal applied alone and tripled with a blend of both pheromones.

Young bed bugs exposed to the combination died in about a day, three days earlier than control bed bugs. Adult female bed bugs exposed to the combination survived for about 6 days, compared to females exposed only to the desiccant dust, which lived for an average of 17 days.

In petri dish tests, the scientists found that the combined treatments using Dri-die consistently worked better than those using diatomaceous earth at generating rapid water loss in the bed bugs.

Turning to a more natural setting for bed bugs, the researchers set up a small plastic container in which a folded piece of paper offered bed bugs a place to hide. Bed bugs tend to stay hidden in wall and floor cracks, moldings or mattresses by day and feed on human or animal blood at night. The researchers created this experimental habitat to see if alarm pheromones would bring bed bugs out of hiding.

After the bed bugs stopped moving within the paper, called a harborage, the scientists applied the desiccant dust followed by the alarm pheromone. They used the most effective blend of pheromones as determined in the petri dish experiments, as well as Dri-die, the more effective of the two desiccant dusts.

All of the bed bugs came out of hiding within five minutes of the application of the alarm pheromones, Benoit said. And the combination of a blend of pheromones and Dri-die reduced survival by 50 percent of both young and adult bed bugs, he said. At least half the young bed bugs were dead within 10 days, and about 60 percent of adult female bed bugs died within 40 days.

Desiccant dust is messy, but its not toxic, so it can be used in agricultural settings, such as chicken coops, where bed bugs can be a big problem, Benoit said. The dust method also can be used in housing, where it would be sprinkled on carpet and eventually vacuumed.

These results were achieved in small areas, but Benoit and colleagues hope the technique could also be applied to large environments infested with bed bugs. Benoit is reluctant to suggest the use of desiccant dusts with alarm pheromones until additional experiments are conducted.

Before companies start selling desiccant dusts laced with alarm pheromones, more tests need to be carried out in room-sized arenas to determine any possible negative effects, Benoit said. Even so, the researchers believe the use of alarm pheromones could increase the effectiveness of desiccant dusts and other kinds of residual insecticides used to kill bed bugs as well.

Benoit noted that repeated use of spray pesticides to which bed bugs are resistant boosts the survival of bed bugs with that resistance, forcing the use of higher and higher concentrations of toxic chemicals to eradicate the insects.

We think that rather than pursue completely new pesticides, its better to use old pesticides in new ways, he said.

This research was supported by a grant from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and an Ohio Agricultural Research and Development Center Directors Fellowship to Benoit.

The studys co-authors are Seth Phillips and David Denlinger of Ohio States Department of Entomology, and Travis Croxall, Brady Christensen and Jay Yoder of Wittenberg Universitys Department of Biology.

#

Contact: Joshua Benoit, (614) 247-5093; benoit.8@osu.edu (E-mail is the best way to contact Benoit.)

Written by Emily Caldwell, (614) 292-8310; caldwell.151@osu.edu

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Scientists Use Bed Bugs' Own Chemistry Against Them

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