Monthly Archives: May 2016

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Latest Bed Bug Incidents and Infestations

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Bed Bugs Pest Identification – General Pest Ohio

After decades of virtually no reports, sightings or infestations, pest control professionals across the country are experiencing and upswing in the number of bed bug calls. Bed bugs have been around for hundreds of years and pestered Americans until the latter half of the 20th century when the use of the modern day insecticides became common. As a result, bed bugs became scarce here in the United States, but they continued to flourish in other countries. And thats where and how the current problem likely began. The increase and ease of international travel has provided bed bugs plenty of hosts (travelers) to ride with back to the States. Here are some answers to the questions commonly asked about bed bugs.

Bed bugs feed on the blood of humans and other warm blooded animals. These insects feed mostly at night when hosts are asleep, causing small, hard, swollen, white welts on the skin. The welts soon become inflamed and itch. Some people are bothered more by the bites than others.

Bed bugs and their relatives are not known to transmit human disease. The welts they cause can itch severely.

Adult bedbugs are reddish-brown to mahogany in color, oval shaped, and flattened. They vary from 1/4 up to 5/8 inch long. After a blood meal their body is swollen, more elongate, and appears to be more of a dull red color. They cannot fly but they do move quickly.

Three for four eggs are laid per day over two months. That means with favorable conditions (temperatures of 70 F and with regular feeding on blood) each female bed bug can lay about 200 eggs. Eggs hatch in as few as 6 days or as long as 28 days, depending upon conditions. When bed bugs bite they inject a fluid into the skin that assists in obtaining blood. This saliva also causes the skin to become irritated and inflamed. It takes about three to five minutes for the bed bug to become engorged and then it crawls away to a hiding place in a crack or crevice to digest the meal. Bed bugs will seek more blood when they are hungry but they are easily capable of going two to eight weeks and in extreme cases up to a year without a blood meal. In situations where they are allowed to thrive there may be three or more generations a year.

Bed bugs hide in cracks, crevices, and seams of bedding and furniture during the day. They prefer narrow crevices with a rough surface where their legs and backs touch both sides of the surface. Some common hiding spots include the crevices of upholstered furniture and mattresses created by folds, buttons, and cording; bed frames; dresser frames; cracks along and behind baseboards; behind pictures and in picture frames; loose wallpaper; drapery pleats; electrical outlets; window frames; door moldings; luggage; and just about any other narrow crack and crevice you can find in a room.

Prior to treating a room the bed linens should be removed and laundered. The floor and especially the perimeter along the baseboards should be thoroughly vacuumed. The closets need to be emptied and all the dresser drawers need to be emptied. The contents of the drawers and closets should be placed in large plastic bags (trash bags work well) and put in another room. Please consult our bed bug preparation notice for detailed instructions.

The treatment needs to be extremely thorough. The sides, cording, and folds of the mattress and box springs are treated but the surface on which people sleep is not. Bed bugs do not hide on the surface of the mattress but in the crevices and folds. The bed framing and headboard need to be treated. Once that is done then the entire perimeter of the room and ALL the possible cracks, crevices, and hiding places need to be inspected and treated. Remember, bed bugs feed at night and then crawl away to nearby cracks and crevices to digest their blood meal. Often times other rooms where there is upholstered furniture, futons, hide-a-beds, etc. need to be treated. The treatment is extensive, time consuming, and expensive. After the treatment is completed allow the area to dry completely and ventilate the room before using the bed or other treated furniture. This may take four hours or longer. A follow up visit should be scheduled within seven to ten days.

The difficulty in control has to do with finding all the hiding places. The more clutter in a room, the more pictures and wall decorations, and the more furniture are factors that increase the number of places that need to be treated. Remember bed bugs have the ability to hide in the smallest crack or crevice and go unnoticed for several weeks.

Bed bugs are hitchhikers. They grab a ride on luggage, baggage, furniture, bedding, boxes, and even clothing worn by people coming from infested sites.

If you are working in an infested room doing things like inspecting, painting, cleaning, vacuuming, etc, you are not going to take them with you. Recall that bed bugs hide in cracks and crevices during the day and search for a blood meal at night. Remember though that bed bugs are hitchhikers. They grab a ride on luggage, baggage, furniture, and bedding so be sure to inspect these items before they are removed from an infested home or apartment.

Bed bugs are capable of moving about in search of hiding places and a blood meal. Certainly, there may be some movement along common utility, plumbing, and cable lines in hotels, motels, apartments, and other multiple type dwelling places. More commonly bed bugs are spread between rooms by people sharing bedding, furniture, clothes, luggage, and other possessions. A good precaution to take once an infestation is identified is to treat the pipe holes, common plumbing and utility lines, and electrical outlets leading in and out of the room.

We have found that it is best to inspect and retreat the area seven to ten days after the initial control procedure. This allows time to evaluate the effectiveness of the process and reapply materials to the hard to reach areas. The need for additional treatments is determined by the amount of clutter, the number of hiding places, and the cooperation of the occupants. After the first treatment it is strongly recommended that the mattress and box spring be encased with zippered plastic covers. These covers are available from Target, Wal-Mart, Bed, Bath & Beyond, and the internet and cost anywhere from $10.00 to $40.00.

Excerpt from:
Bed Bugs Pest Identification - General Pest Ohio

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How to Search Your Hotel Room for Bed Bugs | WIRED

Slide: 1 / of 2 .

Caption: Signs of a heavy bed bug infestation on the bottom of a box springs. Photo: Lou Sorkin

Slide: 2 / of 2 .

Caption: A screenshot showing the comparison tool of the Proof app.

Youre packed for your trip, your boarding passes are downloaded and then that little moment of terror hits. What if the hotel youre going to stay in has bed bugs? Its a real concern, but by being vigilant, you can reduce your chances of bringing home some unexpected souvenirs.

I dont put a lot of trust inonline hotel bed bug ratings or reports; infestation status can change from day to day, and there is no reliable way to verify that reviews are not fake.

Heres how I search for bed bugs when I arrive at a new hotel. I cant promise this is foolproof, but knowing how one slightly-paranoid entomologist deals with the threat of bed bugs might be useful to some readers.

Tools you will need: A flashlight, or the flashlight feature of your phone. Use your phone to take photos of anything suspicious.

What you are looking for: Bedbugs hang out near their food sourceyou. After feeding, bed bugs poop, creating tell-tale brown stains of your clotted blood. You typically wont see bugs they are fairly tiny and can scurry quickly but you will see these stains. You can find many itch-inducing photos hereto help you know what to look for.

1. Put your luggage in the bathtub when you arrive.Luggage is amajor way that bed bugs are moved from place to place. The bathroom has the fewest places for bed bugs to hide, and is the most vigorously cleaned part of a hotel room. If you actually find something suspicious in your search, you can grab your bags out of the tub and run away without risking contamination.

2. Tear the place up.Pull the bed away from the wall, if possible.Headboards fastened to the wall next to the bed are a great place for a flat little insect to stay.Shine your flashlight behind headboards and under beds.Strip the bed, right down to the mattress and bed springs to see whats underneath the sheets and mattress pad. Lift the mattress and box springs up and look underneath. If its a platform bed, inspect carefully under the springs and around the base.Pay special attention to the seams of mattresses and the box springs.These are spots the bugs like to hide in.

3. Check your sheets the next morning.When you get up the next morning, look for little blood stains or tiny rusty spots on your sheets.Reactions to bed bug bites vary widely, from no reaction at all to lots of swelling and redness. You may be one of the people that doesnt react with itching to the bed bug bites, so the presence of bites isnt always a reliable check.Bed bugs sometimes bite ingroups of three but so do fleas, so that isnt always definitive. Dont use luggage racks, closet shelves, or drawers during your stay unless you feel confident that they are bed bug free.

This video is an excellent walkthrough of what should be your standard drill when you travel. Bookmark it. At the end, there are also some good tips for how to negotiate with your hotel if you actually find bed bugs.

Bed Bugs: Theres an App for that.

Itd be handy if you could have all of this info on your phone so you dont miss any steps, and had photos of bed bugs and bed bug poop spots to compare to. Several different apps are on the market at prices ranging from free to $10 bucks.Every app I looked at was put out by a commercial entity, with the purpose of selling you something.

Most also had epically bad user interface (UI) design and graphics; it seemed like pest control companies just ported their vintage 1996 websites into a phone app. Im afraid I must also report there was some use of Comic Sans Fonts.

The problem with a commercially-created phone app is privacy. You hand over a lot of personal information when you install an app. I honestly didnt see much in terms of value added that would make it worth downloading any of these apps. I found joke apps pretending to be bed bug detectors for the purposes of freaking your friends out, and some highly bogus ultrasonic repelling apps that suggest they turn your phone into a sonic threat to bugs of all kinds. There is no evidence that bed bugs or mosquitoes are repelled by ultrasound. Dont waste your money.

Only one app stood out as slightly useful:Bed Bug Proof. (Important caveat: every few screens they try to sell you their product, a neem spray called Proof.) The inspection walk-through is a good overview, and if you give the app access to the photos on your phone, you can access a photo comparison tool. The user interface is clear and easy to use.

Happy Hotel Hunting.

Additional Bed Bug Resources:

Homepage Image: Gilles San Martin/Flickr

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How to Search Your Hotel Room for Bed Bugs | WIRED

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Insects Resembling Bed Bugs – Orkin.com

Some insects, such as bat and barn swallow bugs, share the physical appearance of commonbed bugs.They all belong to the family Cimicidae. The physical differences such as the length of hairs on the thorax often are subtle and require magnification.All of these bugs have short, wide heads like those of the bed bug. Their bodies are broad and flat, enabling them to crawl into narrow crevices. All of them feed on blood, but the preferred source varies depending on species.For example, bat bugs prefer to feed solely upon bats.Furthermore, while bed bugs infest crevices, furniture and bedding within human homes, bat bugs inhabit the abandoned nests of bats, birds and other small mammals.

The poultry bug, also known as the Mexican chicken bug, also resembles the bed bug.Poultry bugs live on poultry farms and, unlike bed bugs, are parasites of birds and domestic fowl, such as turkeys, eagles and hawks.Bed bugs feed primarily upon human blood, although they may choose to feed on other warm-blooded animals as well.

Barn swallow bugs also appear similar to bed bugs. While both insects are approximately the same in color and size, barn swallow bugs are covered in long, silky hair. Barn swallow bugs inhabit the nests of cliff swallows and may inhabit human dwellings when birds migrate. Swallow bugs breed freely in summer and are capable of surviving without food for long periods of time by remaining semidormant.

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Insects Resembling Bed Bugs - Orkin.com

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Luxury White Knit Bed Bug Mattress Encasement Flame …

Luxury White Knit Bed Bug Mattress Encasement Flame Resistant

Description

The face fabric of the mattress cover is Polyester interlock that is produced by the best Polyester interlockin China.

The face fabric is laminated with a 0.012mm tpu film.

The waterproofness of the tpu film is inspected through hydraulic tests.

Every step of making the Bed Bug Mattress Encasement is exactly inspected by us.

The TPU film we use is Dingzing that is the best brand in China.

THe Bed Bug Mattress Encasement is suitable for those families with pets.

THe Bed Bug Mattress Encasement is popular in the line of hotels which can be waterproof on the one side since occupants like drinking in the bed, the Bed Bug Mattress Encasement can prevent the cover from slipping.

The tpu laminated Bed Bug Mattress Encasement is popular among these families with pets that may pee on the mattress.

The Bed Bug Mattress Encasement is also suitable for the line of hotels, since occupants always like drinking whines in the bed.

The tpu film and the glue we use is certificated by the SGS and SIRA.

Specification

Product Name

Polyester interlock zippered mattress cover

Fabric

Polyester interlock

Composition

100% polyester

Height

polyester interlock with TPU

Backing

TPU film

TPU thickness

customized

Total weight

140gsm, 150gsm

Skirt fabric

cotton terry

TPU color

transparent

Waterproof degree

High

Application

Hospital,Home, Hotel

Features

Bed bug mattress encasement against dust mites

Hypoallergenic: provides an allergy-free surface on which to rest

Durability: super durable

Water repellent: keeps mattress long lasting even after having several spills of liquids

Advantages

Machine wash & dry

100% water repellent ensures your mattress maximum protection from staining.

Zipper keeps the protector in perfect fit.

Extra soft and very absorbent, especially helpful in cases of incontinence

Free of dust mites & bacteria- the protector acts as a guard to the mattress ensuring its long life.

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Luxury White Knit Bed Bug Mattress Encasement Flame ...

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Toronto bedbug war still rages, especially in Parkdale …

A while back I was at a meeting about bedbugs at the Davenport Perth Community Centre; the usual information was offered to, and the usual complaints were gathered from, some 40 people in the neighbourhood.

I arrived early and bumped into two guys smoking on the sidewalk. Had they come for the meeting? No, they were just chatting. But they both had, um, personal knowledge of the little bloodsuckers. The problem is not going away.

Heres one reason why:

After the meeting ended, a woman who lives in community housing on Pelham Ave. said she wanted to show me something. She led me to her building, a few blocks away.

In the back was a closed-off area where tenants can dump furniture: the old, the broken, the infested. But the closed-off area was not closed off; anyone had access. Yes, there was a gate with a latch and a lock, but the gate was wide open, and there was furniture available for the taking.

Thats not right.

Back to the meeting: there had been a young man there with maps updates on the bedbug maps this paper published a while back.

We made arrangements to talk more.

Noah Adams is a social worker, studying for his post-graduate degree. He moved here recently from Vancouver, a place not unknown to bedbugs.

There, he worked in the downtown east side. He said, I used to cut hair at a drop-in centre. I met one guy who had bedbugs in his hair; he also had some mental health issues. I cut his hair outside, and put it in a plastic bag.

Thats a key point, and I dont mean about the hair in the bag. I mean some people with mental health issues may not be able to evaluate the problems associated with an infestation.

So?

So where there are infestations, it is axiomatic that there ought to be outreach; where there is no outreach there is I do not hesitate to say this negligence.

Anyway, Noah has mapped the calls made to Public Health, based on postal codes.

The old Star maps show that in 2009, there were 1,563 reports of bedbugs. The next year, there were 2,018 reports.

Noahs updates indicate that there were 1,764 calls in 2011, and 1,375 calls in 2012. He said, Parkdale is the hottest area in the city.

Yikes again.

I live in Parkdale.

The numbers indicate a rise, and then a fall; the fall coincides with the results of a $5 million provincial bed-bug fund; Torontos share of that fund was $1.2 million.

The money may disappear.

Noah said, with some concern, If it was working, why would you stop in the middle of the fight?

Good point.

No, excellent point.

His main concern, apart from the need for vigilance and continued funding? We need integrated pest management. You educate the people, you help them prepare, you treat the unit right away, you treat around the infestation, and you use the proper product; sometimes you use heat.

Heat kills bugs and eggs.

And, as you know, spray does not kill eggs, and so spraying must be repeated when the eggs hatch two weeks later. But there is little use in spraying unless you treat the adjacent units, because bedbugs are neither stupid nor immobile; they scatter when you try to kill them.

Noah then told me something that is forehead-slappingly obvious. In Vancouver, there is a lot of single-room occupancy housing. The province brought them up to code; in some buildings, they have a heat room, where people can bring their things for treatment.

A heat room?

He said, You could do it in old buildings here if you insulated properly, and did the electrical.

TCHC, are you listening?

He also thinks as I do - that landlords ought to be required to inform tenants about bedbug issues, as is required in New York City. Chicago and San Francisco are considering similar legislation.

I wish we would do so here.

Joe Fiorito appears Monday, Wednesday and Friday. Email: jfiorito@thestar.ca

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Toronto bedbug war still rages, especially in Parkdale ...

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