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The 10 Best Bed Bug Exterminators in Boston, MA 2017
We offer pest control and extermination of mice, bed bugs (bedbugs), rats, roaches, bees, mosquitoes, ticks, termites, ants, and other pests. We provide child and pet-safe exterminating in Eastern Massachusetts. Advantage Pest Control is a licensed pest control and exterminator company in Massachusetts. Advantage Pest Control provides full property pest inspections, and WDIR inspections. Advantage Pest Control offers chemical, biological and cultural control methods to exterminate your pest problems. The health and safety of you, your family, your property and the environment are always #1. Advantage Pest Control exterminates insects, problem animals, and rodents, using the latest technologically advanced pest control methods and strategies. Advantage Pest Control offers modifications to your home or property such as installation of chimney caps, vent covers, door sweeps, foundation patching and many other types of pest exclusion. We also offer gutter cleaning, flushing and repairs. Advantage Pest Control takes great pride in their well-trained technicians and customer service staff. They have qualified service technicians available to work with your scheduling needs. In order to keep your home or business pest-free, they offer several different types of pest maintenance contracts to accommodate your individual needs. They provide monthly, quarterly, semi-annual, and annual services. Pest control and exterminator services are offered in Amesbury, MA; Andover, Ballardvale, MA; Beverly, MA; Beverly Farms; Boxford, MA; Bradford, MA; Byfield, MA; Cape Ann, MA; Danvers, MA; Essex, MA; Georgetown, MA; Gloucester, MA; Groveland, MA; Hamilton, MA; Hathorne, MA; Haverhill, MA; Ipswich, MA; Lawrence, MA; Lynn, MA; Lynnfield, MA; Magnolia, MA; Manchester-by-the-Sea, MA; Marblehead, MA; Merrimac, MA; Methuen, MA; Middleton, MA; Nahant, MA; Newbury, MA; Newburyport, MA; North Andover, MA; Peabody, MA; Plum Island, MA; Prides Crossing, MA; Rockport, MA; Rowley, MA; Salem, MA; Salisbury, MA; Salisbury Beach, MA; Saugus, MA; South Hamilton, MA; Swampscott, MA; Topsfield, MA; Wakefield, MA; Wenham, MA; West Boxford, MA; West Newbury, Massachusetts.
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The 10 Best Bed Bug Exterminators in Boston, MA 2017
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Bed Bug Blog – Georgia Atlanta-Macon-Savannah
1. Education - We provide Classes for Tenants and Staff to familiarize them with what they look like and how they are transferred.
2. Inspect Furniture before new move-ins.
3. Have unit inspected by a professional right after a tenant moves out. Get inspection report with findings. If not there can be a battle if there are bed bugs found within the first few months of a new tenant. The tenant will claim they were there when they moved in. Landlord can't prove they weren't.
4. Let the tenants know that if they report a bed bug situation the landlord will handle it and make the tenant pay affordable payments until it is paid.
5. Repeat (numerous) offenders at some point will be evicted if not reported.
Tenants need to realize that Bed Bug Treatments are expensive and Landlords don't want them in their properties. Landlords need to realize that in many cases the tenant really didn't do anything wrong. Through education the tenants can be taught what not to do when it comes to bed bugs.
Excerpts from
Think Like A Bed Bug by: Denise Donovan (IBBRA.org)
When I was deciding on the title, as part of my entomological research, I knew that in order to combat any insect you need to know their traits and behavior in order to outsmart them and thus Think like a Bed Bug became the name of my book.
Thanks Mike for addressing this so well.
Infestations left untreated or not treated correctly because of not understanding the insect seem to be one of the biggest causes of the continued spread within multi-unit properties. Managing bed bugs takes more than a chemical or heat treatment; it takes knowing thy enemy.
Think Like a Bed Bug
Bed Bug Supplement
Know thyself, know thy enemy. A thousand battles, a thousand victories. Sun Tzu, the Art of War
January 4, 2016 Sydney E. Crawley, Michael F. Potter and Kenneth F. Haynes
Around 512 B.C., Sun Tzu and the brightest military minds agreed: to defeat the enemy, you must know the enemy. Fast-forward to today and researchers and pest managers alike are coming to the realization that there are no silver bullets in todays war against bed bugs. Nonetheless, scientists around the world continue to study bed bug biology and behavior in hopes of finding chinks in their seemingly impenetrable armor. The intent of this article is to give practitioners a better feel for what everyday life is like if youre a bed bug, and how some of these insights may lead to improvements in management.
BIOLOGY BEGETS BEHAVIOR.To decipher bed bug behavior one must first know the traits that allow them to survive and produce offspring. The most critical adaptation for survival is their ability to feed exclusively on blood. After hatching, bed bugs molt, shedding their exoskeleton five times before reaching adulthood. Each of these five progressions requires that the insect take another blood meal. Bed bug nymphs seemingly behave similarly to adults, although more research should focus on juvenile bed bug behavior. We do know that young nymphs are more prone to desiccation and may have dispersal habits that differ from adult bugs.
Once a bed bug is an adult, they will need to continue to take blood meals in order to lay eggs and produce offspring. Feeding occurs during times when the host (usually us) is least likely to be aware of their presence. Thus, they forage for blood when we are fast asleep, and their bites are not easily detectable. The period during and directly after feeding is often when mating occurs. Mating behavior among bed bugs is traumatic for females, with males piercing their abdominal cavity directly. Each bout of feeding puts a female at risk for roughly five traumatic inseminations, not necessarily from the same male suitor. These excessive mating attempts can reduce female lifespan. Mated female bed bugs lay approximately 120 eggs (on average) in their lifetime, enabling infestations to grow rather quickly. These biological principles give rise to predictable behaviors displayed in the field, some with implications for management.
Bed bugs characteristically form dense, hidden aggregations in small spaces.
LOVE THE ONES YOURE WITH.If youre a bed bug, there arent many opportunities for privacy. From the moment a pinhead sized neonate emerges from an egg, other bugs both younger and older arent far away. In fact, scores of individuals may be sharing a crevice no wider or deeper than a toothpick.
The tendency for bed bugs to form tightly packed, dense, hidden aggregations is one of the most striking behaviors they exhibit. Within these aggregations, a bed bug will grow, defecate, and mate with other bed bugs that are typically from the same maternal lineage. This aggregation behavior represents a significant advantage to a parasite that feeds on a host that routinely sleeps in the same place. Many of the close relatives of bed bugs, including bat and bird bugs, share the same adaptation.
When deciphering bed bug behavior, it helps to think in terms of what may be in it for the bug. For instance, the tendency of bed bugs to form aggregations would not exist if there were not some intrinsic benefit. Recent studies have revealed that bed bug nymphs reared in groups develop faster than nymphs reared in isolation (Saenz et al. 2014). It also has been shown that bed bugs in an aggregation avoid dehydration much more effectively than bed bugs held alone (Benoit et al. 2007). This probably helps account for the remarkable length of time that bed bugs can survive without taking in any blood for months, or even more than a year in cooler environments. Seemingly, bed bugs that stick together may fare better when the going gets tough and hosts are scarce. Other benefits that have been proposed but not verified include the ability to discourage predators (although predation on bed bugs in our homes is relatively rare), the transfer of beneficial microorganisms between group members, increased opportunities for mating, or caring for offspring. These behaviors exist in other insects that aggregate, but have not been confirmed for bed bugs.
Bed bugs detect chemical cues in the environment with their antennae.
Although aggregating has clear benefits, it is possible to have too much of a good thing. There are also potential risks associated with large aggregations. For instance, the larger the aggregation gets, the more likely you are to become conspicuous to humans trying to kill you. Additionally, competition for mates might become fiercer within these large groups. Perhaps your risk of infection from fungi or other pathogens rises as feces and other debris accumulate in increasingly crowded areas? These potential risks may explain why some researchers have observed a cap to aggregation sizes, which may help us to one day predict why and when bugs within an aggregation may leave their current setup for something better (more on this later).
CONVERSATIONS WE CANT HEAR.Much progress has been made in our understanding of why bed bugs aggregate. For a bed bug to detect the presence of another bug and begin the formation of a group there is communication between them. Insects often send messages to one another to initiate a social interaction. An effective message will be received and interpreted by another bug and a behavioral response, such as aggregating, will follow.
Although not apparent to us, bed bugs are talking in this manner all the time. These conversations are chemical in nature, and since the chemical message benefits the signaler and the receiver we call them pheromones. Pheromones are the main way insects communicate, and those that cause bed bugs to aggregate are appropriately termed aggregation pheromones. Bed bugs detect these compounds with receptors located on their antennae, which serve as the olfactory organ for most insects. Although the social nature of bed bugs cannot be compared to the caste systems of termites or ants, it should be clear that bed bugs do in fact have numerous important social interactions within aggregations.
Bed bugs have few natural enemies, but sometimes are eaten by spiders and ants.
Aggregation pheromones are deposited by bed bugs when they find a suitable place to call home the seam of a mattress or recliner, crevices of a nightstand, etc. We know that there are two parts to a successful aggregation message to other bugs.
One part of the message is released into the air with some of these compounds coming from the scent glands. The other part is deposited directly onto the surface through feces or shed skins and persists in the environment for longer periods of time. All bed bugs respond to the aggregation pheromone.
On substrates, five volatile compounds within the feces or on shed skins attract bed bugs to safe places, while a longer-lasting component (histamine) causes bed bugs to stop and remain there (Gries et al. 2015). The arresting power of the compounds is so powerful that they cause bed bugs to rest on surfaces treated with certain insecticides, which otherwise they may find repellent (Romero et al. 2009). Once the bed bugs have found a suitable place to hunker down, the behavior is reinforced through touch; similar to cockroaches, bed bugs respond positively to contact from other bugs and from the walls of small spaces.
Bed bug feces contain a pheromone that causes bed bugs to aggregate.
LEAVE THE ONES YOURE WITH.Although bed bugs are considered sedentary creatures, there are many times when they leave the security of their aggregation. Bed bugs move when theres a perceived threat, when they need to feed, or when their current location is no longer hospitable such as when a host is no longer available.
Bed bugs tend to respond negatively to light so they may move away from light toward darkness. There is also some evidence to suggest that in addition to light and dark detection, bed bugs may use vision to differentiate between darker and lighter harborages, with a preference for darker colors. Understanding the mechanisms and triggers of bed bug movement will help in preventing their spread from one location to another.
To better understand bed bug dispersal we need to ask ourselves, Why would it benefit a bed bug to leave home? A bed bug on the move risks death when detected by the host. Even without insecticides, humans are a lethal threat and perhaps their greatest risk of a quick demise. Wouldnt it be wiser to remain inconspicuous? Unfortunately, for us, bed bugs have finely tuned adaptations that allow them to avoid periods of time where their movements would be riskiest.
Bed bugs require blood to grow and reproduce, so adaptations for finding a host and taking a blood meal are critical for their survival. Feeding strategies have been fine-tuned over the eons that bed bugs and their buggy ancestors have been parasitizing humans, so theyve become experts at the process. Every time a bed bug feeds they risk detection and death, so quick movement to and from the host is of paramount importance. Like many other animals, bed bugs follow a circadian rhythm, exhibiting predictable behaviors that occur cyclically over 24-hour periods. For bed bugs, these changes are set by the change from light to dark and in fact, bed bugs move more in the dark than in light even in the absence of host cues.
This cyclical pattern includes seemingly random movements that are not directed towards or away from the host, but are, nonetheless, the first step to finding their next meal.
Once theyre triggered by nightfall to move away from aggregations, research indicates that carbon dioxide emission is one of the first cues that stimulate bed bug movement from a distance. As the bug gets closer to a warm-blooded host, their movement becomes more directed as heat is detected. Bed bugs have specialized sensory structures on their antennae that can detect even small fluctuations in temperature. However, bed bugs are not akin to heat-seeking missiles it takes time and many blundering movements based on heat gradients and elevated levels of carbon dioxide to make their way to the host. The exact distances over which bed bugs use heat and carbon dioxide to fine tune their movements are still in question. Determining whether these directed movements start at a few feet or a few inches from the host requires following the movements of individual bed bugs before feeding.
Bed bugs spotted by humans often suffer a quick demise.
The research regarding attraction to human odors is also controversial. Early research suggested that skin odors could have a subtle effect on host attraction, but not nearly as pronounced as the effect of heat. These results should be taken with some caution, as other studies have actually shown that human perspiration is repellent. More work will be necessary to tease apart the role of human odors on bed bug host-seeking. It seems safe to conclude, however, that heat, carbon dioxide and darkness are definitely triggers for most bed bug movement. It could be that some host cues provide directional information (such as heat, which our lab observed directional orientation within 12 inches; Haynes et al. 2008), while others such as carbon dioxide function more as activators, intensifying random movements that are innately turned on each night. (See figure above.)
DO NOT DISTURB.Not all bed bug movements are meant to help them find food; they also may move or disperse in response to threats. Bed bugs emit alarm pheromones when they are disturbed. Interestingly, the bed bug alarm pheromone contains two of the same compounds as the aggregation pheromone, but they are released in much higher quantities when the bed bugs are alarmed. At these levels, these compounds stimulate immediate, rapid movement away from the current location. Unfamiliar touches, light or high, steady levels of carbon dioxide/wind trigger the release of these compounds and subsequent movement. Alarm pheromones, like most chemical compounds for bed bugs, also are detected with the antennae. Humans actually can smell the volatile release of alarm pheromones, that oft-described obnoxious sweetness or buggy odor that is sometimes evident with heavy infestations. The alarm odor is perhaps most apparent when several bugs are confined in a small container and gently shaken.
Tracks of individual bed bugs in a laboratory test arena. Bed bugs cover a lot of ground at night even when not stimulated by a host (top). Note how they tend to follow the edges of the test arena. Movement is more directed when a heat source warmed to human body temperature is provided (below). (Haynes et al. 2008, PestWorld)
The research regarding movement ofunfedbed bugs needs more study. We know that bed bugs move more frequently when they have not fed within a week when compared to bugs that recently fed. However, bed bugs held for five weeks without food moved significantly less than recently fed bugs. This may be a way for a bed bug to conserve energy stores in times when the host is temporarily absent (Romero et al. 2010). We still need to determine whether longer periods without food (such as when an apartment becomes vacant) lead to dispersal away from home base, as it appears to in the bat bug. Complaints involving bat bugs in dwellings often are associated with host dispersal or death.
An important question in respect to management is How likely is a bed bug to move from one apartment to another and if they move, how far can they go? Previously, there was a debate focused on whether adult females disperse more than adult males, and it was suggested that females run from males in the field because of the damage resulting from excessive traumatic matings. Some laboratory studies seemed to contradict this hypothesis. A recent discovery (Cooper et al. 2015) that more marked females than males were more likely to be found in areas far removed from the place where they were marked is likely to renew the debate. The additional observation that all instars of bed bugs are more mobile than was once postulated may also change the way that we think about dispersal. Obviously it remains critical to know if mated females are in fact more likely to disperse (since they could start a new population), thus more work should be aimed at supporting or refuting this claim.
SILVER BULLET BED BUG TRAP?When an insect relies heavily on communication using pheromones (such as many moth species) it may be possible to trick the insect into honing in on a trap baited with synthetic pheromone blends. Recently, the elusive contact and volatile aggregation pheromone used by bed bugs was deciphered (Gries et al. 2015). This led to high hopes that a synthetic lure could be produced that would effectively detect the presence of infestations in their initial stages. While the recent findings are encouraging, there may be significant hurdles to the utility of such an approach. It is becoming increasingly evident that bed bugs do not rely on pheromones in the same way as many other pest insects that hone in on pheromone sources from great distances. Potent long-range pheromones used by the industry to successfully monitor stored product pests may not work for bed bugs, because it is likely that communication is close range. In fact, one of the main compounds in the aggregation pheromone, histamine, requires direct touch from the bed bug for arrestment and may be detected via taste, not smell.
Furthermore, sex attractant pheromones that have the most impressive value in insect detection for pests such as the Indianmeal moth are not (as far as we can tell) part of the bed bugs repertoire. Traps baited with synthetic compounds will need to compete with former and existing aggregations of live bed bugs whose interactions are being reinforced by tactile contact. While theres hope for improved detection using pheromone traps, the industry should probably temper its expectations that the technology will be a panacea in the continuing effort to detect low-level infestations.
Various traps already have been marketed for bed bugs utilizing heat, CO2 and other host odors. However, when bed bugs recently have fed, responses to host cues such as carbon dioxide emission diminish. Thus, at any given time, these traps would not be attractive to the portion of the bed bug population that has recently fed to satiation. To reliably detect bed bugs at low levels, traps would presumably need to be placed in multiple locations within the dwelling, translating to higher cost and conspicuousness. We also know that the concentration of carbon dioxide changes rapidly from the point of exit (nose, mouth), to alongside the skin, to the area surrounding a host. We have not yet honed in on the most attractive concentration for bed bug movement, or determined whether carbon dioxide would perform better released in waves/pulses rather than steady streams.
INTRODUCTION OR INFESTATION?We often hear reports of a school, office, library or clinic that shut down over the presence of one to two bed bugs. The concern often stems from a presumption that one bug can turn into several and that people are likely to transport them home. A key question in respect to whether one bug will turn into several is this: Will it find a host, a mate and an aggregation offering the communal benefits noted previously? In some cases, especially when there are a few widely scattered bugs, it can be as hard for a bug to find us as it is for us to find them. Finding a mate will be no sure bet either, especially if only one bug was introduced, or two bugs of the same sex. The biggest risk of infestation occurs when a fed and mated adult female is introduced, because she has the potential to lay eggs.
However, this still does not ensure that she or her offspring will be able to find a suitable host, especially in settings where there is no sleeping person. All in all, it is probably safe to say that introductions of small numbers of bed bugs into schools, offices, libraries, retail stores and other non-bed environments are unlikely to turn into large infestations as is more common in residences. A bed bug spotted in such places necessitates action but seldom closure/cessation of operations. While its easy to overreact in these situations, resources are better spent educating workers and following established protocols.
WRAP-UP.Understanding insect behavior has long helped the industry battle cockroaches, termites, ants and other foes. Learning to think more like a bed bug should yield similar benefits. Although eradicating infestations is the end-goal, there are other benefits to understanding their cryptic ways. Thinking like a bed bug makes us better inspectors and enhances our ability to predict their movements within buildings. It also enables more tactical strikes with insecticides and other treatments. Understanding bed bug behavior empowers the industry to communicate more effectively with the public on topics ranging from pretreatment preparation to prevention. If the strategy of knowing thy enemy worked for Sun Tzu, then maybe we can put it to work for us, too.
Photos M.F. Potter
REFERENCES
Benoit, J.B., N.A. Grosso, J.A. Yoder and D.L. Denlinger. 2007. Resistance to dehydration between bouts of blood feeding in the bed bug,Cimex lectulariusis enhanced by water conservation, aggregation, and quiescence. Am. J. Trop. Med. Hyg. 76): 987-993.
Cooper, R, C. Wang and N. Singh. 2015. Mark-release-recapture reveals extensive movement of bed bugs (Cimex lectulariusL.) within and between apartments. PLoS One. 10): e0136462. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0136462
Gries, R., R. Britton, M. Holmes, H. Zhai, J. Draper and G. Gries. 2014. Bed bug aggregation pheromone finally identified. Angew. Chem. 54): 1135-1138.
Harraca, V., C. Ryne and R. Ignell. 2010. Nymphs of the common bed bug (Cimex lectularius) produce anti-aphrodisiac defense against conspecific males. BMC Biol. 8): doi:10.1186/1741-7007-8-121
Haynes, K.F., A. Romero, R. Hassell and M.F. Potter. 2008. The secret life of bed bugs. Pest World. Jan/Feb: 4-8.
Romero, A., M.F. Potter and K.F. Haynes. 2009. Behavioral responses of bed bugs to insecticide residues. J. Med. Entomol. 46): 51-57.
Romero, A., M.F. Potter and K.F. Haynes. 2010. Circadian rhythm of spontaneous locomotor activity in the bed bug,Cimex lectulariusL. J. Insect Physiol. 56): 1516-1522.
Saenz, V.L., R.G. Santangelo, E.L. Vargo and C. Schal. 2014. Group living accelerates bed bug (Hemiptera: Cimicidae) development. J. Med. Entomol. 51): 293-295).
Mistaken Identities
The alarm pheromones of bed bugs have other interesting functions as well. Juvenile bed bugs release alarm pheromones for their own protection against other bugs specifically, misdirected mating attempts by adult males. A unique pheromone blend (consisting of four compounds) is released by young bed bugs when sexual interest from adult males is directed their way. Newly fed 5th instar nymphs closely resemble adult females in size and shape, making them a target for mating attempts from overzealous males. These traumatic mating attempts are costly for wounded nymphs and a waste of time for males, since they will produce no offspring (Harraca et al. 2010). Adult males also release alarm pheromones to deter homosexual mating attempts from other male bed bugs (Ryne 2009). Clearly, there are intriguing and important social interactions between bed bugs. Some may even have future implications for management.
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Bed Bug Blog - Georgia Atlanta-Macon-Savannah
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Bed Bugs: An Expensive Pest Problem That Low-Income Renters Often Pay For – KERA News
Bed bugs can be especially overwhelming for low-income families. The pests are drawn to apartment complexes with lots of people packed into small spaces, and they cause pain, anxiety and financial stress.
Some apartment complexestreat theinfestations, then send the bill straight to the tenants.
Something Wasnt Right
When her little girls started waking up each morning with red welts on their faces, Shelby Rodriguez was worried. It was summer though, so sheassumed theywere mosquito bites.Besides, she had already checked their mattresses thoroughly and had seen no sign of bed bugs.
But the bites kept appearing and she couldn't shake the nagging feeling that something was in the house. So she pulled her toddlers' bunk bed away from the wall and investigated with a flashlight.
"And that's when I found them, so all along the frame, the floorboards and then in the crevices and the screw holes of the beds is where they were hiding out. From eggs, to the early stages of the bed bugs, and to the ones that had been feasting on us which you could tell because they were the darker, brownish-red color, she says.
Taking Action
So Rodriguez and her husband called the apartment manager to report the problem, they lived in Euless at the time.After a week with no action, they showed up in person, requesting pest control, still nothing.Three weeks later,they went to the Texas Tenants' Union for advice, thenmade a formal request in writing. At this point, the bedbugs were everywhere. They threw out two beds, a crib, all the mattresses and their living room set.
"Everything that we had tossed we had only had for about three months. So that was a few thousand dollars that went out the window, she says.
The apartment complex did respond to the written request and treated theapartment for bedbugs. The Rodriguez family was shaken though, and didn't want to finish out their lease. The complex denied their request to leave earlyand charged them the final three months rent.
A Low-Income Issue
Mike Merchant isan urban entomologist for theTexas A&M Agrilife Extension Service. He says a lot of North Texastenants just like Rodriguez are fighting bed bugs. Unlikeher, many of them are stuck paying for the treatment themselves -- or just going without. That's because many rental companies have added a page to their lease that puts responsibility on the renter.
"They're usually asked to sign a statement saying they've inspected the apartment and there are no bed bugs in their apartment, he says.
Merchant says there's just one problem with that.
"Even a professional cannot go into a freshly painted, cleaned up, empty apartment and be able to tell whether there's bed bugs lurking in the walls."
The reason why is pretty unsettling. Bed bugs have no interest in empty apartments because there's nothing to eat. They're hiding out, waiting.
"They've got us to feed on and it has nothing to do with how sanitary we are, or aren't, Merchant says. It's just we're providing blood for them at night, and all they need is a place to hide during the day."
Trying To Fix An Expensive Problem
So tenants move in, report that their apartment is clear, even though bed bugs may just be out of sight, then discover them weeks or months later. But they've signedthatextra page on thelease, so the cost of extermination is on them. It can run from $300-$1,500. And that's not an option for many low-income families. Merchant says they'll often try to treat the problem themselves, which doesn't work. Then some families give up, and move out. Bringing the bed bugs with them.
"For someone with money, it's going to be frustrating, but is something you can take care of. But if you don't have enough money to pay the pest control, then you're just going to be stuck with it, Merchant says. Perhaps for years.
And that's something Shelby Rodriguez wouldn't wish on anyone.
"I mean my kids were sleeping on the floor at one point, crying, not understanding what's going on. So you feel powerless, and everywhere you go, you just feel like you're on the lookout for bed bugs, she says.
And even 10 months later, settled into a new, pest-freeapartment in Bedford, she doesn't expect that feeling to go away anytime soon.
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Bed Bugs: An Expensive Pest Problem That Low-Income Renters Often Pay For - KERA News
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Do you know how to spot a bedbug? KTVA 11 – KTVA.com – Anchorage, Alaska
Estimated read time
1m 58s
(Which of these common insect pests is a bedbug? In a survey conducted by researchers at the University of Kentucky, just 35 percent of U.S. business travelers and 28 percent of leisure travelers could correctly identify the bedbug. The answers: 1-Ant, 2-Termite, 3-Louse, 4-Bedbug, 5-Tick. Entomological Society of America)
Most Americans fear bedbugs but the majority cant identify one out of a lineup of other common insects, new research shows.
In a survey of U.S. travelers conducted by researchers at the University of Kentucky, 60 percent of participants said they would switch hotels if they found evidence of bedbugs in a guest room.
However, only 35 percent of business travelers and 28 percent of leisure travelers correctly identified a bedbug when looking at a group of similar small pests.
Considering all the media attention paid to bedbugs in recent years, the fact that most travelers still have a poor understanding of them is troubling, said Michael Potter, Ph.D., extension professor in UKs Department of Entomology and co-author of the study.
The study, published in American Entomologist, the quarterly magazine of the Entomological Society of America, found bedbugs were a much bigger concern than other potential hygiene issues at a hotel. Less than a quarter of people surveyed said they would switch hotels for factors such as signs of smoking or dirty towels or linens.
The findings are particularly worrisome for the hotel industry, the researchers say, given the role that online reviews play when travelers are determining where to stay. More than half of the people surveyed said theyd be very unlikely to select a hotel with a single online report of bedbugs.
The fact that theres a pretty obvious misunderstanding of what a bedbug looks, like much less what to do about it a lot of these reports are anecdotal, unconfirmed and they may not even have a whole lot of relevance, Potter told CBS News.
Read more at CBSNews.com on how to spot a bedbug.
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Do you know how to spot a bedbug? KTVA 11 - KTVA.com - Anchorage, Alaska
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Bed bug scare looms large for hotel, lodging industry – Daily News & Analysis
According to a recent study, most business and leisure travellers in the United States can't identify a bed bug, and yet the tiny pest evokes a stronger response in hotel guests than any other potential room deficiency, putting the hospitality industry in a difficult spot.
In a survey of U.S. travellers conducted by researchers at the University of Kentucky, 60 percent said they would switch hotels if they found evidence of bed bugs in a guest room. Meanwhile, no more than a quarter said they would switch hotels for factors such as signs of smoking or dirty towels or linens.
In the same survey, however, just 35 percent of business travellers and 28 percent of leisure travellers correctly identified a bed bug in a line-up of other common insects.
"Considering all the media attention paid to bed bugs in recent years, the fact that most travellers still have a poor understanding of them is troubling," said co-author Michael Potter.
It is particularly problematic given the central role that online reviews play in travellers? selection of where to stay. More than half of survey respondents said they would be very unlikely to choose a hotel with a single online report of bed bugs.
"From a hotel industry perspective, it's worrisome that a single online report of bed bugs would cause the majority of travellers to book different accommodations, irrespective of whether the report is accurate. Furthermore, the incident could have involved only one or a few rooms, which the hotel previously eradicated," said lead author Jerrod M Penn.
Despite a highly negative impression of bed bugs, more than half (56 percent) of respondents said they either never considered the threat of bed bugs while travelling or considered it but were not worried.
If a hotel were to proactively provide information on the steps it takes to prevent bed bug infestations, 46 percent of respondents said they would stay at the hotel and would appreciate knowing about those measures. The second most common response, however, was "do it, but don't tell me" (24 percent).
An overwhelming majority (80 percent) of respondents said hotels should be required to tell guests if their room has had a prior problem with bed bugs. Among those who wanted such a disclosure, 38 percent of business travellers and 51 percent of leisure travellers said they would want to know of prior infestations going back a least one year or more.
Responses to bed bug concerns were generally consistent across various demographic cross-sections in the survey.
Potter noted that the public's lack of understanding of bed bugs "contributes to their spread throughout society as a whole." But the hospitality industry must deal with both the pest itself and consumers' strong, if ill-informed, attitudes about bed bugs.
The results are soon to be published in American Entomologist.
(This article has not been edited by DNA's editorial team and is auto-generated from an agency feed.)
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Bed bug scare looms large for hotel, lodging industry - Daily News & Analysis
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