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Travel Q&A: Bed Bug Prevention – University of Minnesota …

Extension > Garden > Insects > Traveler Q & A: Preventing bed bugs from hitchhiking to your home

Stephen Kells and Jeff Hahn, University of Minnesota Extension Reviewed 2006

Different stages of bed bugs (1/16 inch to 1/4 inch in size) and fecal spots

Bed bugs on a backpack

This factsheet provides some specific steps that you can use to prevent hitchhiking bed bugs from infesting your home. There is nothing magic about the way these pests initiate an infestation. They are simply parasites that look to resting persons or animals for a meal and, once obtaining this meal, they travel back to a place of hiding.

The thing that makes bed bugs so challenging for detection and control is they have excellent abilities to squeeze into cracks and crevices and will often go unnoticed by the casual observer.

The majority of bugs will cluster around areas where people will rest, but a few of them will move off to hide in more remote areas. They shun light and if they are disturbed or if they suddenly feel exposed, they will attempt to move to quieter (and more remote) areas. It is this cryptic behavior that creates the challenge to dis-infesting articles that have been in areas of bed bug activity and cause the impression that they have special abilities that we cannot contend with.

The following are questions that are commonly asked by travelers and the recommendations you can use to prevent transport of bed bugs from an infested site.

Bed bugs are oval, flattened, brown, and wingless insects approximately 1/4" to 3/8" long (5-9 mm). They are similar in appearance to a wood tick. After the bug has taken a blood meal, its color will change from brown to purplish-red. Also after feeding, it is larger and more cigar-shaped making it appear like a different insect. Young bed bugs are much smaller (1/16 or 1.6 mm when they first hatch) and nearly colorless except after feeding, but resemble the adult in general shape. You may also find cast skins, which are empty shells of bugs as they grow from one stage to the next. After a blood meal, bed bugs deposit fecal spots (composed of digested blood) in areas adjacent to the feeding site or back at their hiding places.

You can only confirm that bed bugs are present by carefully inspecting each item. Pay attention to cracks, crevices, seams, and folds of material. Remember that bed bugs can be 1/16" to 1/4" and young, unfed bugs may be mostly translucent (see pictures). If you find bugs, then you have to be careful in containing the infestation. If you do not find bugs, but still suspect there may be an infestation, the steps mentioned below will provide peace-of-mind and ensure that you do not bring an infestation home.

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Bed Bugs Exterminator Warren, MI providing bed bugs pest …

Warren is a city in Macomb County in the U.S. state of Michigan. The city is home to a wide variety of businesses, including General Motors Technical Center, the United States Army Detroit Arsenal, home of the Tank-Automotive and Armaments Command (TACOM) and the Tank Automotive Research, Development and Engineering Center (TARDEC), the headquarters of Big Boy Restaurants International, The Cadillac Motor Car Division of General Motors, Campbell Ewald, and Asset Acceptance.

The village of Warren, the predecessor of todays city, was a much smaller one square mile within the boundaries of the now defunct Warren Township, Macomb County, Michigan. Named after War of 1812 veteran, and frontier cleric, Rev. Abel Warren. Rev. Warren was a Methodist Episcopal preacher who left his native New York in 1824 for Shelby Township. He went throughout the present-day Macomb, Lapeer, Oakland, and St. Clair Counties, baptizing, marrying, and burying pioneers of the area, as well as establishing congregations and preaching extensively. He is, by several accounts, the first preacher to be licensed as such by the State of Michigan.

The village was centered on the corner of Mound Road and Chicago Road, around what was called Beebes Corners, around a street called Beebe Avenue. Beebes Corners was a carriage stop between Detroit and Utica. The village had a population of 582 in 1940 and 727 in 1950.

Warren was incorporated as a city in 1957 and consists of what was previously Warren Township, less the city of Center Line, which is encircled by Warren. Between 1950 and 1960, Warrens population soared from 42,653 to 89,426. This population explosion was fueled in part by white flight from its southern neighbor of Detroit in that decade. This change in population continued into the next decade when the citys population doubled again.

Do you have bed bugs in Warren?

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Bed Bugs – LSU AgCenter

IDENTIFICATION AND BIOLOGY

Bedbugs are pests of humans, domestic animals, bats, rodents, rabbitsand wild birds. Worldwide,two species commonly attack humans. One of these, Cimex lectularius, is widely distributed over most of the world, and it is the species that is most common in temperate North America.

During the first half of the 20th century, the bed bug was a common household pest and was a scourge for travelers, for it was common even in respectable hotels. The importance of this insect gradually diminished with improvements in household cleanliness, personal hygiene and the increased availability and use of effective residual insecticides. In developed nations, they declined in incidence, and infestations became a rare event. In the last few years, this downward trend has started to reverse, and globally there have been reports of an increase in bed bug numbers.

Bed bugs are wingless insects, roughly oval in shape, 5-6 mm long when fully grown and fast crawlers. The juvenile stagesare pale cream colored, and the adults are rust brown,becoming adeeper red-brown following a blood meal. Bed bugs are dorsoventrally (top to bottom)flattened and can hide in cracks and crevices, making detection very difficult.

There are five juvenile stages known as nymphs, each lasting 2.5 to 10 days. The nymphs are miniature versions of the adults in general appearance. Each nymphal stage requires at least one blood meal to molt to the next stage, and it takes 3-5 minutes to complete a blood meal. The length of the lifecycle is extremely variable and is dependent on temperature. The temperature threshold for development is about 60 degrees, with optimal development at 86 degrees. The total development time from egg to adult for C. lectularius varies from 24 days at 86degrees to 128 days at 65 degrees. In average conditions, around 74 degrees, the lifecycle takes around two months to complete.

All nymphal stages and adults of both sexes require blood for nutrition and development. At low temperatures, nymphs may survive for five to six months without feeding, whereas adults can survive even longer. For example, in cold conditions, they can live almost two years, even without a blood meal. Mated females usually feed to engorgement and then begin to lay eggs three to six days later. Typically, each female lays two to three eggs a day. The cream-colored eggs are cemented on rough surfaces of hiding places, and nymphs will hatch within approximately nine days at a room temperature of 74 degrees. Also, depending on environmental conditions, female bed bugs may feed every three to four days.

The mouthparts of bedbugs are especially adapted for piercing skin and sucking blood. Bed bugs respond to the body warmth of a host and quickly locate a suitable feeding site. They tend not to live on humans, and the only contact is for a blood meal. Blood feeding typically occurs at night.They tend to seek shelter during the day and are inactive while digesting the blood meal. However, bed bugs are opportunistic and will bite in the day, especially if starved for some time.

Bed bugs seek shelter in a variety of dark locations, mostly close to where people sleep. These include under mattresses, floorboards, paintings andcarpets; in various cracks and crevices of walls; within bed frames and other furniture; and behind loose wallpaper. Bed bugs typically stay in close contact with each other, and heavy infestations are accompanied by a distinctive sweet, sickly smell. Blood spotting on mattresses, bed linen, nearby furnishings and walls is often a telltale sign of an infestation.

Bed bugs are public health pests largely because of their nuisance biting, and often the most serious health aspect for many individuals is the mental trauma of knowing there is an infestation. Skin reactions, which are commonly associated with bed bugs, result from the saliva injected during feeding. Some people do not react to their bite, whereas others can experience a great deal of discomfort and loss of sleep from the persistent biting. The most commonly affected areas of the body are the arms and shoulders. Reactions to the bites may be delayed, with up to nine days before lesions appear. Common allergic reactions include the development of large wheals, which are accompanied by itching and inflammation. The wheals usually subside to red spots and can last for several days.

Although it hasbeen suggested that bed bugs may transmit of a wide variety of infectious agents, there has never been a proven case of a disease agent being passed on to humans by bed bugs.

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Bed Bugs - LSU AgCenter

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The Bed Bug Resource » Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

What Are Bed Bugs? Can You See Bed Bugs? Are Only Dirty People Affected? Do Bed Bugs Bite? Why Are Bed Bugs Back? Can Bed Bugs Pass Diseases? How Do I Know If I Have Bed Bugs? What Should I Do If I Think I Have Bed Bugs? How Do Bed Bugs Spread? How Do You Get Rid Of Bed Bugs? Where Can I Send A Sample For Identification? The PCO Treated My Home Why Arent The Bed Bugs Dying? What Attracts Bed Bugs? Why Are They Only Biting Me? What Are My Rights As A Tenant? What If I Have More Questions?

1. What are bed bugs?

Bed bugs are an insect belonging to the order Hemiptera (True Bugs).

Hemipteran insects have a mouth part called a proboscis that is modified for sucking fluids. In the case of the bed bug this fluid is blood.

Bed bugs appear flattened when viewed from the side, oval when viewed from the top, and can be anywhere from a couple of millimeters long (nymphs) to 6-8mm long (adults). Their colour varies depending upon their life stage and whether or not they have recently consumed a blood meal. Typically they are translucent yellow as young nymphs and a darker red-brown as adults.

2. Can you see bed bugs?

Bed bugs are certainly visible with the naked eye and are not to be confused with dust mites.

Adult bed bugs can get to be 6-8mm long (about the size of an apple seed). Bed bugs have five juvenile stages called nymphal instars (each progressively larger than the next). The first nymphal instar is about the size of a pinhead. The fifth nymphal instar is approximately 4.5mm long.

3. Are only dirty people affected?

Perhaps one of the biggest misconceptions is that bed bugs are associated with unsanitary conditions. This could not be further from the truth.

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The Bed Bug Resource » Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

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Bed bugs » AZ Dept. of Health Services Director’s Blog

Bed bugs (Cimex lectularius) havent really been a problem in AZ for the last few decades. Sure, weve had reports of bed bug infestations, but theyve mostly been limited to areas around the Grand Canyon where lots of international travelers come and go toting their sleeping bags. After all, bed bugs are basically hitch-hikers, so it makes sense that theyd be where there are a lot of bedrolls coming and going.

For whatever reason (probably a combination of lots of things), its gotten a lot worse lately- statewide. Luckily, bed bugs dont transmit disease, although they can be a public health issue because of the physical and mental health problems (e.g. anxiety) they can cause. Bed bugs are basically blood-sucking parasites similar to head lice. They feed on human blood. Like I said, they dont transmit disease, but some people can have an allergic reaction to the bites. Plus if people itch the bites with dirty fingernails, they can get infected with things like Staph. The bottom line is that theyre gross and nobody wants them around.

In your home, the key is prevention. The most important thing to remember is that theyre hitch-hikers, so preventing them from getting in your house in the first place is important. For example, if your kids have sleepovers, discourage guests from bringing their own bedrolls, provide the sheets yourself.Cimex are experts at hiding inplaces like in the seams of mattresses, stuffed animals and under any clutter or objects around a bed. Theyve got small flat bodies allow them to fit into real small spaces and can stay there for a long time even without a blood meal. They can travel over 30 meters in one night, but they tend to live within a meter or so of where people sleep. They molt their skin (exoskeleton) occasionally, so one way to tell if you have a problem is if you find their shell around beds.

Think prevention, because once they get in your house itsa real challenge to get rid of them. Controlling them in multi-family homes is more challenging because bed bugs frequently travel between units. Integrated Pest Management is the most effective way to prevent and get rid of infestations. Its an approach that focuses on prevention, observation and intervention. Its an ecological approach that significantly reducesthe use of pesticides while at the same time managing pest populations at an acceptable level. The CDC & EPA have a helpful fact sheet that explains more.

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