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Bed Bug

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the bed bugs may already be (or can go) into or through wall voids, ... Kreuger's: 'Don't get Bitten by the resurgence of Bed Bugs,' Pest Contr. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Bed Bug


1
  • Bed Bug
  • Biology
  • and
  • Control
  • Revised 12 / 10 / 2oo8

2
Taxonomic Hierarchy
  • Kingdom Animalia
  • Phylum Arthropoda
  • Class Insecta ( Hexapoda )
  • Order Hemiptera ( Sub-Order
    Heteroptera )
  • Family Cimicidae
  • Genus Cimex
  • Species lectularius
  • Scientific Name Cimex lectularius L.

  • Common Name the Common Bed Bug

3
Adult Male - C. lectularius (L.)
4
Adult Female - Engorged
5
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

6
Dorsal View Head Thorax
7
Ventral View - Head Thorax
8
  • Pictorial
  • Key
  • To
  • ID
  • Bed
  • Bugs

9
Bed Bug (Common) vs. Bat Bug (Eastern) C.
lectularius L. vs. C. adjunctus Barber
10
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
    instar )
  • 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. w/o feeding Nymphs
    3-4 mo.
  • Mating Traumatic Insemination

11
Feeding - Several Instars
12
Engorging Adults N - 2
13
Engorged Nymphs - 1 2
14
Eggs and Droppings
15
Viable Eggs
16
Rusty Spots on Bedding
17
Bed Bugs Rusty Spots on Sheet
18
Adult Bed Bugs Mating
19
Medical Importance
  • - Found naturally infected w/ 28 human pathogens

  • - Never proven to transmit any human disease
  • - Several species feed on humans
  • (including Common Tropical Bed Bugs,

  • Bat Bugs, Poultry 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 (but
    it is reversible)
  • - Serious social stigma to having an
    infestation

20
Feeding a Rearing Jar
21
Immediate Bite Reactions
22
Severe Bed Bug Bite Reactions (C. lectularius)
  • - on a human arm
  • - on a leg

23
Delayed Reactions ( 24 hrs.)
24
Habits ( Behavior )
  • - Nocturnal, harbor in clusters, but NOT social

  • - Hide in daytime in cracks, crevices, behind
  • baseboards, bed frames, mattress seams,
    etc.
  • - Take a blood meal to repletion in 3-10 min.
  • - Prefer humans but feed on other hosts, too
  • - Travel 5-20 ft. (each way) nightly to feed
  • - Feed every few days if hosts available
  • - Often void part of previous meal while feeding

  • - Can remain fully active at
  • if acclimated for 24 hrs at

25
Bed Bugs Have Thin, Flat Bodies
26
Some Control Strategies
  • - Thorough survey accurate ID
  • - Educate customers ( may take 1 visit )
  • - Sanitation will NOT eliminate them
  • - Initial vacuuming (mattresses, beds,
    harborages )
  • - Treat harborages w/ properly labeled residual

  • - - try to not use highly repellent materials

  • - Dust electrical boxes, voids (maybe seal them
    shut )
  • - Seal harborages shut (pref. silicone-based
    sealant )
  • - Consider physical barriers if appropriate
  • - Sticky monitors ( may detect continued
    presence)
  • Note Uncover their bottom sticky areas

  • ( this may catch bugs crawling underneath
    these )

27
Bed Bug Rusty Spots on a Sheet
28
Survey Sites Bed Frames, Night Stands
29
Mattress (especially seams)
30
Upholstered Chairs
31
Upholstered Chairs (3)
32
Window Curtains and Frames
33
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) into 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
  • a. On the other side of the common wall
  • b. Along the wall-ceiling edges of rooms below

34
Some Newer Techniques Products
  • 1. Gentrol labeled for Bed Bugs
  • 2. Heat Treatments ( Whole-House, Batch, Room )

  • 3. Steaming Mattresses, or Beds, etc.
  • 4. Phantom (Chlorfenapyr) labeled to control
  • ants / roaches indoor crack-and-crevice

  • 5. Baygon (propoxur) aerosol is labeled for
  • crack-and-crevice treatments
  • 6. Encase Mattress Pillows in special covers
  • 7. Permethrin repellent, over-the-counter (s-h)
  • 8. Silica gel powder/ residual (e.g., in
    Tri-Die )

35
Heat Treatments (esp. in Batches)
36
Steaming Furniture
37
Bedding Encasements
38
A New preventiveSelf-Help Treatment for Luggage
39
Fumigation- type treatments
  • 1. Whole structure fumigation will eliminate
    bugs present within treated areas, but . . . . .

  • a. This is seldom economically practical.
  • b. There is no residual protection.
  • 2. The same things are true for . . .
  • a. Batch or Single-Room Fumigations,
  • b. Heat treatments (Whole Bldg. or One - Room),
    and
  • c. Cold treatments (Whole Bldg. or One - Room).

  • d. Steam treatments (mattress, box spring,
    etc.).

40
A New Practical Reference( Dec., 2007 ) for
PMPs the Public
  • Available for purchase at www.techletter.com

  • Currently 67.00 (U.S.)

41
Bed Bug Detection Dogs
42
Multi-Attractant Traps ( new technology, 2-e.g.)
  • Cimex Detection CaseTM
  • Nightwatch TM

43
  • Questions ?

44
  • Note The following slides are included for
    possible use in a presentation, or they may
    simply be omitted ( or maybe just not shown ).

45
Evidence of Resurgence
  • Snetsinger . Bed bugs may actually cause slums
    .
  • . . (Busvine 1951) today (1997) specimens
    are
  • unavailable for classes few young
    entomologists
  • have seen an infestation . . Mallis 8th
    ed. p.399
  • Kreugers Dont get Bitten by the resurgence of
    Bed Bugs, Pest Contr. 68 (3) 58-64 ( Mar. 2000
    ).
  • NPMA 29 infestations confirmed 18 states
    DC
  • Library Update, Sept. 2001
  • NPMA 600 infestations confirmed 49 states, DC
    ,
  • 4 Provinces CAN., 4 states MEX. ( Aug.,
    2007 )
  • Orkin has treated bed bugs in 49 states ( Jun.,
    2008 )

46
Possible Factors In Bed Bug Resurgence
  • 1. Greater human mobility
  • 2. Less use of any residuals last 15 yrs

  • 3. Significant switch to baits for roaches ants
    (1980s)
  • 4. Many PMPs are still not very familiar w/ bed
    bugs
  • - inadequate survey, wrong ID, incomplete
    treatment
  • 5. Pyrethroids used in most accounts are
    repellent
  • - bugs do not get a lethal dose (esp. in
    deep cracks)
  • - harborages easy to miss in first survey
  • - bugs may detect avoid residual
    treatments
  • - bug pop. often split or move from such
    treatments
  • 6. People may call any unknown bite - bed bugs

47
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

48
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. 2008.
    Chap. 4. Bed Bugs, pp.131-151 In Public Health
    Significance of Urban Pests. Bonnefoy, X., H.
    Kampen, K. Sweeney, (eds.). WHO Europe,
    Copenhagen, Denmark.
  • 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.
  • 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.

49
A Few Suggested References (c.)
  • Snetsinger, R. 1997. Chap. 9. Bed Bugs Other
    Bugs.
  • pp. 392-424, In 8th ed. Mallis Handbook of
    Pest Control. S. Hedges (ed.). GIE Publ, Inc.,
    Cleveland, OH.
  • Technical Guide (TG) 44. 2007. Bed Bugs
    Importance, Biology, and Control Strategies.
    AFPMB, www.afpmb.org .
  • 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.


50
A Few Suggested Web Sites
  • These sites can be searched for more details,
    images, etc. about Bed Bugs.
  • Armed Forces Pest Mgt. Board www.afpmb.org
  • National Pest Management Assn.
    www.pestworld.org
  • PCT Magazine web site. www.pctonline.com
  • Pest Management Professional web site.
  • www.pestcontrolmag.com ( formerly Pest
    Control )
  • The Univ. of KY Extension Entomology web site.

  • www.uky.edu/Entomology/entfacts/struct/ef636.htm

  • Coopers Pest Solutions www.cooperpest.com
  • Or, Search for bed bugs on www.Google.com
  • Note - some facts on some websites are wrong
    !!

51
Male Paramere
52
Female Para-genital Sinus
53
Adult Male - C. lectularius (L.)
54
Adult Female Lateral View
55
Dorsal View - Front Half
56
Swallow Bug
57
Engorged 1st Instar Nymph Micturating
58
Adult Female
59
Immediate Bite Reactions
60
(No Transcript)
61
the Eastern Bat Bug C. adjunctus Barber
62
Monitors May Help Detect Bed Bugs
63
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