bed bugs?!?! EWWWW!

topic posted Mon, January 3, 2005 - 1:05 PM by  Kelly
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A dear friend of mine just returned from Czech republic....with 50-100 bed bug bites!!! Her fiance has ~200. It's really quite amazing. It seems they were continuously bitten after they left Czech republic, leading them to believe that they may have accidently brought some of the nasty critters back with them.

In the event that they have brought some back into their apartment, a quick search on the web indicates these nasty little bugs are not easily exterminated.

Any entomologists here studied bed bugs before? Anyone here have some tips for getting rid of them? Anyone have some first hand experience with the lil critters?

Thanks and happy new year!!
posted by:
Kelly
SF Bay Area
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  • Re: bed bugs?!?! EWWWW!

    Fri, January 7, 2005 - 2:17 PM
    Check out the new bed bug pic I put up. Take a good long look at dat lil focker....
    • Re: bed bugs?!?! EWWWW!

      Wed, December 13, 2006 - 1:44 PM
      I found this today and thought the tribe may be interested in more bed bug info.
      Nora
      source:
      newswire.indymedia.org/en/200...8.shtml

      Experiments with bed bugs
      Brent Herbert 12 Dec 2006 16:19 GMT
      Some amateur bed bug science
      Lately I was surprised to discover that I have bed bugs.

      Two previous stories I have posted on this subject:

      'Sleep tight' and don't let the bed bugs bite
      nyc.indymedia.org/en/2006/11/80037.html

      The bed bug epidemic
      nyc.indymedia.org/en/2006/11/79834.html

      The attached photo shows my attempt at isolating my bed. My mattress and box spring have been wrapped, trapping inside the colonies of bed bugs dwelling therein. I am using no head board. The bed posts are sitting in stainless steel bowls filled with water and some disinfectant. The bed is surrounded by sticky glue traps made of double sided carpet tape, and there is also a glue trap barrier on the bed posts. I have not yet aquired fresh water Diatomaceous earth, and I am thinking of purchasing a batch of those really sticky glue traps that can trap a mouse. I also have my tent pitched on my living room floor as a backup in case all these precautions fail. The netting around the bed will only be effective against bed bugs in the larger stages (bed bugs molt and go through about six stages of growth). Bed bug nymphs are smaller than the head of a pin and can go right through mosquito netting, and at the present there does not seem to be any 'bed bug netting' available that I can find with a small enough mesh to stop even immature bed bugs.

      I discovered that I have had two seperate nests of bed bugs in my bedroom, representing two different strains of bed bugs. There were bed bugs in my box spring, and probably my mattress as well. There is a small tear in my box spring just below where my shins would be while I was sleeping. This summer I noticed that I was suffering from what I thought was shin splinters. I sleep on my side, and it just so happened that since a bed bug will never crawl a foot if it can crawl an inch, these bed bugs would crawl over and bit me on the shins, and no where else, since that was shortest distance. This nest of bed bugs left painful welts on my shin bones, although once in a while I would notice a welt further from the shin bone on the calf area, which I thought was also a shin spinter (little pieces of broken bone). My shins have healed up in the past couple of weeks, since I did not have shin splinters, I had nasty bed bugs that leave welts. I also have another nest of bed bugs that set up camp in a cardboard box. This nest of bed bugs does not leave welts, but rather their bite leaves behind the tiniest little red dot. I have noticed a bed bug had walked along a vein on my arm, leaving bites spaced about half an inch apart. The only symptoms I notice from those bites is some itching that only appears four or five hours after I wake up.

      It has been said that some people are 'allergic' to bed bug bites and develope welts, while other people do not. I know, given that I have had two different strains of bed bugs in my suite, that I am not allergic to bed bugs, but rather that there are two different strains of bed bugs in existence, a more primitive group of stone age throw backs, that leave welts, and the more modern and much better adapted bed bug that leaves no welt, and whose bite is almost undetectable, since it is just a small red dot that no one would pay much attention to and might not even notice if they were not looking for it. I also know that the nasty bed bugs were living in the mattress and box spring, and are now trapped in there, because while I was waiting for the netting to arrive I was sleeping in the living room, and was bed bug free for about a week and a half before the second nest of bed bugs once again tracked me down on the living room floor. I once again noticed the little red dots, the itching, and also some blood on a pillow which is also a dead give away of bed bug activity. The nasty bed bugs in the mattress and box spring have been wrapped, and have not reappeared, because I have received no more of those welts since they became trapped by that wrapping operation, and now I have only received those little red nips from those more modern and much better adapted bed bugs.

      From this I conclude that while it might still be true that some people are 'allergic' to bed bugs, in most cases it is more likely that people who get welts have been attacked by a colony of primitive bed bugs.

      What this suggests is that bed bugs are a species in transition, and thus what we are seeing is a remarkable example of bed bug evolution in action. The evolutionary strategy being adopted by the bed bug species consists of an attempt to become invisible so that they can carry on being bed bugs while remaining undetected. Creatures adapt when they are under pressure and thus must adapt or perish, and since bed bugs are now adapting in such a way as to 'cease to exist', and are 'faking their own extinction event', you might say, this suggests that bed bugs were pushed close to extinction and responded by adopting this strategy of faking their own extinction. Since primitive bed bugs still exist, bed bugs are a species in transition, which might suggest that this development in bed bug evolution is a relatively recent phenomena, adopted perhaps as one response to vigorous spraying of pesticides by human beings.

      Bed bugs also display a remarkable ability to adapt to pesticides. I have done experiments, since I have bed bugs handy unfortunately, and I can report that none of the commercially available consumer products I tested work on bed bugs. You can soak a bed bug with pesticides and they will survive, and this includes consumer products which are labelled as being targetted at bed bugs.

      If you read the bed bug blogs you will find lots of angry villification of Rachel Carson, who wrote the book 'Silent Spring', which then led to the banning of DDT, for the theory is that because DDT was banned, now we have bed bugs, a theory which makes no sense whatsoever since DDT was banned half a century ago, and we are only experiencing a plague of bed bugs in the last couple of years. People are also unaware that bed bugs became resistant to DDT back in the 1940s, which is one of the reasons why the pest control industry turned away from DDT and began using alternative chemicals in the last part of the century. DDT is constantly being promoted as the bed bug panacea, but the truth of the matter is that bed bugs are amazing creatures showing an ability to adapt to any form of pesticide, and that includes DDT, which bed bugs long ago defeated in the 1940s, and which they will defeat again should DDT be brought back onto the market because now we have bed bugs.

      Bed bugs probably continue to carry with them the genes for DDT resistance, since such resistant strains existed earlier in the previous century. Hotels, including four and five star hotels which target the market for international travellers, are one of the hot spots for bed bug infestations. This has led some to speculate upon what possible connection might exist between international travel and the bed bug epidemic. It is worth remembering here that DDT has not been banned in every country for the last half century, and so therefore we must assume that the DDT bed bug exists in the countries which have continued to use DDT throughout the last half century, and that bed bugs resistant to such strong pesticides have infested hotels and in the great mixing bowl bed bugs have been trading genes for resistance to a wide variety of pesticides, including resistance to DDT. So therefore we must assume that the DDT resistant bed bug already exists, both those strains which continue to carry the previous resistance to DDT built up in the 1940s and those strains which have imported such resistance and can now no doubt be found in four and five star hotels, New York lofts, penthouses, and Manhattan office towers.

      Now all these locations are the last place you would expect to find bed bugs, and the fact that they have bed bug infestations there is an indication that money cannot buy protection from bed bugs, because if you could pay to get rid of a bed bug they would certainly not be found persistently infesting such locations. The problem here is that we have pesticide resistant strains of bed bugs on the loose, and the connection with 'international travel' would have to be that we have imported some particularly virulent strains that have a very stubborn resistance to pesticides, since they had the opportunity to be exposed to worse pesticides than native bed bugs have been exposed to in recent decades.

      The Illinois Pesticide Review reports on the growing problem of pesticide resistance in bed bugs being reported after scientific testing of samples of bed bugs being gathered by pest control experts around the nation.

      www.pesticidesafety.uiuc.edu/new...html

      Some quotes from the article : "Entomologists at the University of Kentucky report that some bed bug populations across the United States are resistant to pyrethroid insecticides...dult bed bugs from four infestations collected from separate locations in Kentucky and Ohio were several 1,000-fold resistant to deltamethrin and lambda-cyhalothrin, compared to a susceptible laboratory strain...Using a discriminating dose test with bed bug nymphs, the researchers further found that seven of the eight field populations submitted by pest-management firms across the country were well over 100-fold resistant to deltamethrin. These tests included bed bugs originating from California, Florida, Kentucky, Ohio, and Virginia...Bed bug resistance to insecticides is not a new phenomenon. Resistance to DDT was first reported in the late 1940s and was so widespread a decade later that other products were already being recommended as alternatives...resistance is likely a factor in the resurgence of this international problem.
      • Re: bed bugs?!?! EWWWW!

        Wed, June 20, 2007 - 4:40 AM
        Thanks for your post, Nora. What eventually got rid of the bugs for you? We're experiencing a 2nd resurgence of bed bugs. We had them in January, got rid of them via exterminator, then got them again in May. This time my husband tried to exterminate using over the counter pesticides but it didn't work at all. The pesticides did kill a couple of them, providing me with two specimens. I have essentially become an amature bug collector, bagging everything I can find now.

        I, too, experienced two kinds of bug bites. At first the bites were minor (back in May) and I wasn't entirely sure they were bed bug bites at all. Pretty soon, however, the welts came on (couple weeks later) and I'm wondering if the small bites are from younger bed bugs and the welts from older bed bugs. Does anyone know the life span of a bed bug? Also...how long can they remain dormant?

        We threw out our bed last night and slept on an inflatable mattress a room over. They still found us. We broke down and called an exterminator.

        I suspect our colony of bugs is living in the carpeting. If anyone has suggestions on getting bed bugs out of the carpeting (or killing those living beneath the carpeting...I'd love some advice. I'm about ready to pull it all up at this point.
        • Re: bed bugs?!?! EWWWW!

          Fri, June 22, 2007 - 1:41 PM
          When I was taking my ento class I was told they live in the carpeting, the walls, you name it. I can try to do some asking around for you, but I am not in Hawaii anymore so I am not sure how long it will take for some responses.
        • Re: bed bugs?!?! EWWWW!

          Wed, July 11, 2007 - 6:55 PM
          Best of luck. I would be freaking out. I'm a "bug person," but I passionately hate parasites when I'm the host.

          Have you seen the SF Chronicle article?

          www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi
          tinyurl.com/2zhepe

          If it were me, I'd probably get a brand new metal frame bed and an inflatable mattress and stand the feet of the bed in big bowls of soapy water, rip out the carpets, wash everything, move as much clutter and crap into a storage facility as possible, and clean obsessively. After exterminating.
  • Re: bed bugs?!?! EWWWW!

    Wed, December 13, 2006 - 10:16 PM
    I can find out what the exterminators use on our dorms if you want. We have people traveling from all over the world and have had several bed bug situations this semester.
  • Re: bed bugs?!?! EWWWW!

    Tue, May 20, 2008 - 11:01 PM
    hi everybody,

    i had my bed bug encounter at a hotel in NYC. it s become well known the city is quite infested with those beasts.
    all i can tell is the exterminator was at the hotel (with mostly long term residents) every other week, used bed bug insecticide (just forget the over the counter insecticide - it makes them only hide deep in the materasses and wait for the poison to dissolve; it essentially suffocated me more than them i guess). the extermination did not help - most probably because they did not close down the hotel, but treated rooms and levels separately.
    also in a ny times article i read at that time they re also extremely difficult to get rid of in a private appartment.
    if youre moving (like leavin the hotel abroad which has them, or the students residence or whatever), all the textiles have to be washed as hot as possible. ideally, you d not enter your flat but wash them in tubs or similar things with boiling water in the entrance of your appartment. i did that - and yes, it s embarassin if neighbours see you. hwoever, after all the nerves the bedbugs cost me, i really did not care.
    throw away the suitcase.
    clean the shoes.
    this should keep you from bringin them to your new/ordinary place.

    wait up to 9 months - they can survive up to that time without blood. i guess leavin your own flat for that time (and not leavin any pets ther e- in hunger they attack cats and dogs too) would thus help too, if you can.
    it s nerve wrackin - dont despair!!

    ew, acutally now that i hear that with the czech republic i have no joy in travellin no more :-s
    i thought only the US was badly infested..
    good luck!
    • Re: bed bugs?!?! EWWWW!

      Wed, May 21, 2008 - 12:27 AM
      Surprisingly the cockroach is a natural predator of the Bed bug, although not the most common.
      The most common predator is the Masked Hunter (Reduvius personatus) a type of assassin bug. I have no clue where you would find some in your area, or if you would even be willing to let some roam around in your bedroom for a while.

      You will have a challenge trying to get rid of the bed bugs, they can overwinter and go without food for over a year. methods such as isolating your bed generally do not work very well, many tend to climb walls or high object so they can drop down on to a bed rather than crawl up the sheets or bedposts.

      I have heard of using permethrin, but wanted to verify before posting. Nora has already included a wealth of information from her research. I will share with you an experiment I did based on my research on Linnaeus. Bed bugs, like fleas, are attracted to carbon dioxide, this is how they find living breathing mammal hosts.

      I made "threshers" one to capture fleas and it worked LIKE A CHARM.. this is how you make them:

      In a coffee cup saucer, fill fill the saucer with vegetable oil, just deep enough to trap the beasties.
      place a teacup candle in the middle of the oil and light it.

      The way this works is.. the candle emits both heat AND carbon dioxide, the beasties are attracted to what they think is a host, easily accessible on the ground, the crawl or leap toward the candle and get stuck in the oil. Furthermore, you will have fine samples for your dissecting microscope or digital camera.

      Enjoy
      • Re: bed bugs?!?! EWWWW!

        Wed, May 21, 2008 - 1:37 AM
        wow your trap sounds great.. i m glad i did not bring any with me anyways :)
        hmm the hotel i described - it s Riverside/Morningside Inn in NY, dont ever go there!(by the way most hostels have them too..) - had plenty of roaches.
        but maybe i drove them away with my standard insecticide i sprayed at the beginning of my vacation, just proactively, without knowing bout the beasts in the materasses :(

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