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Bed Bugs:

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[ Common & Tropical Bed Bugs, Bat Bugs, & 'Bird' Bugs ] ... the bed bugs may already be (or can go) inside or through wall voids, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Bed Bugs:


1
  • Bed Bugs
  • a Pest Control
  • Challenge

2
Description
  • Small 3/16 inch long, oval, flat,
  • reddish - brown insects
  • True bugs - w/ 3-seg. beak, 4-seg. antennae
  • Vestigial wings a thin coat of fine
  • golden hairs
  • Give off a distinctive musty, sweetish odor
  • Partly digested blood in feces causes
  • rusty spots
  • Males pointed abdomen
  • Females rounded abdomen

3
Adult Common Bed Bugs, C. lectularius (L.)
  • Unfed
  • Nearly Engorged v

4
Biology
  • Feed only on Blood Mammals or Birds
  • Attach small (1 mm long ) whitish eggs to
    surfaces in harborages where the bugs hide in
    loose clusters
  • 5 Nymphal instars ( Need 1 blood meal each )
  • Life Cycle takes 4-5 weeks (egg-to-egg) in good
    conditions 75-80 RH 83-90o F
  • Female may lay 200-500 eggs in her lifetime
  • Adults can survive 1 yr. without feeding
  • Nymphs 3-4 mo. ()
  • Mating Traumatic Insemination

5
Eggs Droppings
6
Adult Bed Bugs Mating
7
Habits ( Behavior )
  • - Nocturnal, harbor in clusters, but NOT social
  • - Hide in daytime in cracks, crevices, bed
    frames, behind baseboards, mattress seams, etc.
  • - Take a blood meal to repletion in 3-15 min.
  • - Prefer humans but feed on other hosts, too
  • - Travel 5-20 ft. (each way) nightly to feed
  • - Feed every few days if hosts are available
  • - Often void part of previous meal while feeding
  • - Can remain fully active at
  • if acclimated for 4 - 24 hrs at

8
Bed Bugs Have Thin, Flat Bodies
9
Adult Feeding Defecating
10
Bed Bugs Rusty Spots on Sheet
11
Medical Importance
  • - Naturally infected w/ 28 human pathogens
  • - Never proven to transmit any human disease
  • - Several species feed on humans
  • Common Tropical Bed Bugs,
  • Bat Bugs, Bird Bugs
  • - Salivary proteins cause sensitivity to
    repeated
  • bites by large numbers of bed bugs
  • - - 5 stages no reaction delayed
    reaction both immediate
  • delayed immediate reaction only
    finally, no reaction
  • - - True hypersensitivity can develop
    (apparently reversible)
  • - Serious social stigma to having an
    infestation

12
Bed Bugs (s.l.) that Commonly Bite Humans
  • Bed Bat
    Swallow

13
Immediate Bite Reactions
14
Delayed Reactions ( 24 hrs.)
15
Why Bed Bugs are a Control Challenge
  • 1. Often hard to detect in small numbers.
  • ( small, nocturnal, cryptic, fairly
    mobile )
  • 2. No reliable attractant available ( currently
    ).
  • 3. Readily detect ( avoid) many chemicals.
  • 4. Adults can live 1 yr. without feeding.
  • Nymphs fed once can live 3 mo. w/o
    feeding
  • 5. Insecticide resistance newly documented.
  • 6. Very easily re-introduced and/or spread.

16
  • Bed Bug Control in a Barracks, ca. 1943

From Pest Control Mag., May 2006, p. 42
Using Zyklon B ( HCN) gas
17
Control Strategies Considerations
  • - Thorough survey accurate ID
  • - Educate customers ( may take 1 visit
  • Sanitation alone will NOT eliminate them)
  • - Eliminate Clutter (poss. use sealed bags/
    bins)
  • - Vacuuming ( beds, other harborages )
  • - Hot launder cloth _at_ 113o F (or dry clean )
  • - Treat harborages w/ residual insecticide
  • - - try to not use highly repellent materials

18
Control Strategies (Contd)
  • - Dust electrical boxes, voids
  • ( and maybe seal them shut )
  • - Seal harborages shut
  • ( pref. w/ silicone-based sealant )
  • - Consider physical barriers if appropriate
  • - Sticky monitors may detect continued
  • presence ( but are not very effective )
  • Note Uncover bottom sticky areas
  • ( this may catch bugs crawling underneath )

19
Thorough Inspection
20
Mattress (especially seams)
21
Cryptic Harborage Sites
Above Photo by M. Potter
Above (2) Left Photos by B. Ogg
22
  • Pictorial
  • Key
  • To
  • ID
  • Bed
  • Bugs

23
When Treating Think in 3-D
  • 1. If you treat along part of a baseboard
  • remember . . the bed bugs may already be (or
    can go) inside or through wall voids,
  • along pipes, or through air vent passages
  • to rooms on either side, above, or below.
  • 2. Consider concurrently treating the same
    identical spots or edges -
  • a. On the other side of the common wall
  • b. Along the wall-ceiling edges of rooms below
  • (and/ or above).

24
Some Interesting Recent Data
  • 1. A major national Pest Mgt. Co. reported that
    for the period Sept. 02 Apr. 06, 24 of
    700 hotels they serviced had active bed bug
    infestations . . . and . . . .
  • 2. In at least 19.7 of the cases,
  • at least one secondary room , of
  • 440 primary infested rooms ,
  • had live bed bugs at the same time
  • (before any treatment).

25
Some Newer Techniques Products
  • 1. IGRs - Gentrol labeled for bed bugs (03)
  • 2. Heat or Cold ( Bldg., Room, Batch, Bed )
  • 3. Steaming Mattresses, Beds, etc.
  • 4. Residual Pyrethroids several are currently
  • labeled for crack-and-crevice treatments
  • 5. Encase mattress Pillows in plastic covers
  • 6. Permethrin repellent, over-the-counter (s-h)
  • 7. Bug-sniffing dogs quick detection, small
    pop.

26
Steam Treatment
  • Photos by F. Meek, OrkinTM

27
Heat Treatment of a whole Airplane
  • Photo by M. Holfeld, Seminole Mag.

28
CO2 ( Snow ) Treatment
  • Photo by CryoniteTM

29
Available through ResidexTM www.residex.com/bedb
ugs
30
Bed Bug-Sniffing Dogs
31
Bed Bug Control Code of Practice
( CoP ) Australia
32
  • Questions ?

33
A Few Suggested References (a.)
  • Blow, J., M. Turell, A. Silverman, and E. Walker.
    2001. Stercorial shedding and transstadial
    transmission of Hepatitis B virus by common bed
    bugs (Hemiptera Cimicidae). J. Med. Entomol.
    38(5) 694-700.
  • Cabrera, B., and C. K. Heinsohn. 2006. Instant
    Symposium Not letting the bed bugs bite.
    American Entomologist.
  • 52 (2) 98-121. Includes title article plus
    nine (9) more short articles as presented by
    other authors at the E.S.A. National Meetings in
    Ft. Lauderdale, FL Dec., 2005.
  • Cooper, R. and H. Harlan. 2004. Chap. 8.
    Ectoparasites, Part three Bed Bugs Kissing
    Bugs. pp. 494-529, In 9th ed. Mallis Handbook of
    Pest Control. S. Hedges (ed. dir.). GIE Publ,
    Inc., Cleveland, OH.
  • Doggett, S. 2006. A Code of Practice for the
    Control of Bed Bug Infestations in Australia.
    Australian Environmental Pest Managers Assn.,
    Ltd., NSW, Australia. 54 pp.
  • See www.aepma,com.au

34
A Few Suggested References (b.)
  • Doggett, S., M. Geary, and R. Russell. 2004. The
    resurgence of bed bugs in Australia With notes
    on their ecology and control. Environ. Health,
    4(2) 30-38.
  • Harlan, H., M. Faulde, and G. Baumann. 2007.
    Chap. 5. Bed Bugs. In Vector Control. WHO,
    Geneva. in press Due to be published Oct.,
    2006 .
  • Hwang, S., T. Svoboda, I. DeJong, K. Kabasele,
    and E. Gogosis. 2005. Bed Bug infestation in an
    urban environment. Emerg. Inf. Dis., 11(4)
    533-538 (Apr.)
  • Jupp, P., R. Purcell, M. Shapiro, and J. Gerin.
    1991. Attempts to transmit Hepatitis B virus to
    chimpanzees by arthropods. S. Afr. Med. J., 79
    320-322.

35
A Few Suggested References (c.)
  • Potter, M. 2004. Your Guide to bed bugs. PCT Mag.
    Vol. 32(8). A special 6-page pull out section
    between pages 12 and 13 of the Aug., 2004 issue.
  • Snetsinger, R. 1997. Chap. 9. Bed Bugs Other
    Bugs. pp. 392-424, In 8th ed. Mallis Handbook
    of Pest Control.. GIE Publ, Inc., Cleveland, OH.
  • Usinger, R. 1966. Monograph of Cimicidae. Thos.
    Say
  • Foundation, Vol. VII, Entomol. Soc. Amer.,
    Lanham, MD.
  • WHO. 1982. Vector Control Series. VI. Bed Bugs.
    World
  • Health Organization. WHO/VBC/82.857. 9 pp.

36
A Few Suggested Web Sites
  • These web sites can be searched for more
    possibly useful details, images, etc. about Bed
    Bugs.
  • The National Pest Management Assn.s web site.
  • www.pestworld.org
  • PCT Magazine web site.
  • www.pctonline.com
  • Pest Control Magazines web site.
  • www.pestcontrolmag.com
  • The Univ. of KY Extension Entomol. web site.
  • www.uky.edu/Entomology/entfacts/struct/ef636.htm
  • Or, Search for bed bugs on www.Google.com
  • Note - some facts on some listed sites are
    wrong !!

37
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