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Bed bugs have favorite colors | Science News for Students
Do you have favorite colors? So does a bed bug. And a new study shows that, like many humans, bed bugs change their color preferences as they age.
"It's just like when you were four, you might have liked the color blue. But when you get to eight, you might say, 'I don't like blue anymore. I like green.' Then at 12, you say, 'I really like black,'" explains Corraine McNeill. She is one of the studys authors and an entomologist. That is a scientist who studies insects. She works at Union College in Lincoln, Neb. Her teams study was published April 25 in the Journal of Medical Entomology.
Bed bugs are tiny, blood-sucking insects that can infest peoples homes. They may live in beds or other soft furniture. And they are tough to get rid of. Previous research showed these bugs like the colors red and black and don't like white, yellow or green. That's probably a survival strategy, says McNeill. It's harder for predators, including humans, to see the reddish-brown bugs on a dark background.
But earlier studies had looked only at adult bugs. McNeill and her team tested the color preferences of bed bugs throughout their lives. Baby bugs, or nymphs, pass through five molts before becoming adults. (A molt is when a young bug sheds its skin.) The researchers found that as bed bugs move through these life stages, their favorite colors change.
To find out what color bed bugs like at each stage of life, McNeill started with tiny pieces of colored cards. She folded each into a tent 1 centimeter by 2 centimeters (0.4 inch by 0.8 inch). That was big enough for a bug to take shelter in. Each tent was a different color: lilac, violet, blue, green, orange, red or black. Since earlier tests showed bed bugs avoided yellow and white, the researchers skipped these colors.
McNeill placed the paper tents in a large Petri dish. In the middle of the dish she placed a single bed bug. The bugs, which don't like to be exposed, ran for one of the tents. McNeill repeated this during each stage of a bed bugs life.
At each age, the bed bugs tended to run to tents of different colors. Sometimes, the color they liked at one stage became a color they avoided at another.
The youngest bugs preferred orange and black tents. They didnt like lilac ones. At the second life stage,they liked black, green, orange, red and violet tents. Now they avoided the blue tents. At the third stage, they chose green and red tents over blue, lilac and violet. At the fourth stage theypreferred red and blue to lilac, violet and green. And at the fifth and final stage before adulthood, they liked black, blue, orange, red and lilac but not green or violet. By the time the bugs reached adulthood, their favorites were black and red.
McNeill thinks these changes in color preference have to do with the way the bugs eyes develop. Their eyes are made up of tiny bumplike structures called ommatidia. These are the individual light-sensing and focusing elements of their compound eyes. "As [the bugs] get older, the number and size of bumps increases," says McNeill. "We think maybe that's why their color preference changes."
It takes bed bugs only about five weeks to become adults. They can live for four months to a year. So the colors that they prefer as adults may be most important for people trying to control the bugs. But this doesn't necessarily mean people should throw out black and red bedding, says McNeill. Tiny paper tents, after all, are not the same as entire beds.
"We would need to put white sheets on one bed and red or black sheets on another and see which they prefer," she says. "Nobody has done that research."
Changlu Wang did some of the earlier research showing adult bed bugs prefer red and black. Also an entomologist, he works at Rutgers University in New Brunswick, N.J. Wang agrees that getting rid of red or black bedding wouldnt necessarily help people fight bed bugs. But frequently washing sheets and blankets in hot water can help. So can calling in pest control experts to spray pesticides.
Paying for a pest control expert can be hard for people who don't have a lot of money, though. So infestations in low-income neighborhoods can be tough to fight.
Wang and his team looked for bed bugs in 2,372 low-income apartments. These were in 43 buildings in four New Jersey cities. On average, slightly more than 12 percent of apartments had bed bugs, they found. This is higher than when bed bugs were common in the 1940s, in England, Wang notes. Back then, he says, the infestation rate was usually much less than 10 percent." (There is no research to show how common bed bugs are in middle-income apartments, notes Wang.)
His groups study was published April 5 in the Journal of Medical Entomology.
While bed bugs arent known to transmit diseases to humans, they are still a problem. The most frequent symptoms reported by people in Wangs study were pain, itchiness, welts and trouble sleeping. But bed bug bites dont affect everyone in the same way. That may be why 49 percent of the infestations he and his team found were in apartments whose residents didnt know they had bed bugs.
Thats the amazing part of doing this kind of survey, says Wang. Some people dont react, even with a lot of bed bugs.
bed bug A parasitic insect that feeds exclusively on blood. The common bed bug,Cimex lectularius, sucks human blood and is mainly active at night. The insects bite can cause skin rashes and welts that sometimes look like a mosquito bite, but different people react in different ways.
compound eye The type of eye in arthropods, such as insects, spiders and lobsters. It consists of many identical light-sensing and focusing elements, called ommatidia. They all sit, squished side-by-side, across the surface of each eye collecting light and working together to provide the animals vision.
entomologyThe scientific study of insects. One who does this is an entomologist. A paleoentomologist studies ancient insects, mainly through their fossils.
infest To create a parasitic community, such as when wasps infest the porch of an abandoned house. Such a community of pests is known as an infestation.
insectA type of arthropod that as an adult will have six segmented legs and three body parts: a head, thorax and abdomen. There are hundreds of thousands of insects, which include bees, beetles, flies and moths.
molt (v.) To cast or shed skin, exoskeleton or feathers, which will be replaced with new. (n.) The act of molting, or the thing that is dropped during molting.
nymph A stage in the life cycle of some insects in which the immature individual resembles the adult. As nymphs grow, they will molt, or shed their external skeleton, several times. Unlike butterflies, which have a dormant stage of life called a pupa before becoming adults, nymphs remain active and will directly enter adulthood after their final molt.
ommatidia (sing. ommatidium) The individual units making up the surface of an insects compound eye. Each works as a separate visual receptor. A single eye may consist of more than 1,000 of these hexagonal (six-sided) units. Each ommatidium contains its own lens and set of light sensing vision cells.
pesticide A chemical or mix of compounds used to kill insects, rodents or other organisms harmful to cultivated plants, pet or livestock, or unwanted organisms that infest homes, offices, farm buildings and other protected structures.
Petri dish A shallow, circular dish used to grow bacteria or other microorganisms.
predator(adjective: predatory) A creature that preys on other animals for most or all of its food.
welt (in medicine) A raised and usually swollen patch of skin. It often appears reddened and can result from a bump, pressure or an insect bite.
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Bed bugs have favorite colors | Science News for Students
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Signs of Bed Bugs: How to Detect Bed Bugs
Bed bugs are a common but serious issue for homeowners. These small, brown insects cannot jump or fly. Knowing the signs of bed bugs is the first step in finding and removing these pests.
Bed bugs usually stay close to the feeding areas so look for bed bugs in the areas where they congregate including along mattress seams, in the frames of beds or the headboards, behind baseboards and under carpet edges. Bed bugs can also hide behind pictures, door and window casings, loose wallpaper and any cracks.
View How to do a Bed Bug Room Inspection video.
Infestations tend to happen quickly and with little warning, so early signs of bed bugs often point to future problems. The insects stay hidden during the day and come out to feed at night. As a result, residents may miss early bed bug problems until pest populations are already hard to manage.
Bed bugs can hide just about anywhere; this is what can makedetecting bed bugs can be so difficult. Typical hiding places are mattress seams, behind pictures, box springs, in curtains, behind headboards, in sofas, behind baseboards, bed frames, along carpet edges and night stands.
Bed bugs are not just in beds although they usually hide within 3 to 6 feet of their feeding area.
You should regularly inspect all sheets and pillowcases for small brown blood stains (fecal spots) and inspect the seams and folds of mattresses for live insects and bloodstains.
Bed bugs usually stay close to the feeding areas so look in the areas where they congregate including along mattress seams, in the frames of beds or the headboards, behind baseboards and under carpet edges.
Bed bugs can also hide behind pictures, door and window casings, loose wallpaper and any cracks.Residents should inspect bedding, mattresses, cushions, and furniture after finding early signs of bed bugs.
Bed bugs typically hide during in the daytime, so it can often be very difficult to spot them. If you dont see the actual bed bugs look for tiny, rust-coloured stains that they leave behind on mattress tags and seams, ceilings, under seat cushions and behind headboards.
Keep an eye out for potential hiding places, such as buckling wallpaper or carpet, and conditions that can attract bed bugs like excessive heat or moisture.
Some additional symptoms of bed bug infestations include:
Schedule a Bed Bug Inspection
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Signs of Bed Bugs: How to Detect Bed Bugs
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Liquid Nitrogen Sprays Freeze Bed Bugs in Italy …
THE WORLDWIDE BED BUG infestation, with all its miseries and desperation, has given rise to innovations from common molecules like cold liquid nitrogen gas (N2). Being 78% of planet Earths atmosphere and the air we breathe, liquid nitrogen gas is considered by some an ecological bed bug remedy. As John Emsley points out in his book, Natures Building Blocks, a copy of which I stumbled upon in Century Books near Pasadenas Caltech: A bit over 78% N2 gas and the atmosphere goes from breathable to death by asphyxiation. Not that you would breathe better on Mars with its 2.6% nitrogen atmosphere; though neither would bed bugs survive, if leaving the planet to escape the plague were an option.
In its freezing cold liquid form, nitrogen gas freezes bed bugs and most everything else. Besides freezing and preserving genetic materials, liquid nitrogen is used in dermatology to freeze and excise warts, small lesions, early-stage skin cancers, and actinic keratosis. Liquid nitrogen treatments are called cryotherapy or cryosurgery, not because it makes you want to cry out in pain. But rather because cryogenics (physics) is the study of low temperatures. According to the National Cancer Institute, the extreme cold of liquid nitrogen is even used inside the body to freeze and excise cancerous pancreatic and liver cells, childhood retinoblastoma, precancerous cervix disorders (cervical intraepithelial neoplasia) and noncancerous bone tumors.
Italy, which has 400 pest control operators (PCOs) specializing in bed bugs, is the meeting ground for liquid nitrogen and bed bugs, reported Riccardo Biancolini and Guglielmo Pampiglione of the Istituto G. Caporale (Teramo, Italy) at the Entomological Society of America (ESA) annual meeting in Reno, Nevada. As people travel from north to south on trains and buses and stay at hotels or hospitals, Italys 21 regions and 50 million people have been exposed to the modern day bed bug resurgence.
The liquid nitrogen spray method developed by Ecotrade(R) (Roma, Italy) is called the Criopest method. Ecotrades Criopest method sprays liquid nitrogen at -196 C (-320 F) to freeze bed bugs and other pests. Liquid nitrogen has percolation effects, penetrating pillows and carpets to kill bed bugs. Italian hotels hire specialist PCOs who guarantee 100% results, and like the fact that after 1-2 liquid nitrogen treatments hotel rooms can be immediately rented again. The cost in 2011 was $400-600 euros per room. Well worth it if you are in the room rental business; and less costly than conventional bed bug treatments. The Italians told the ESA that 80% of their clients choose the Criopest liquid nitrogen option.
Liquid nitrogen is usually combined with other methods, as bed bugs are a tough pest to ferret out. As part of IPM (Integrated Pest Management) programs, the cold liquid nitrogen treatment of carpets and bedding might be combined with heat (hot dry air) to kill bed bugs on textiles. Also items to be disinfested are placed in bags with pyrethrin gels for 210 minutes. As part of the multi-modality IPM approach, pesticide treatments (only about 75% effective in 5 days) are also used to leave behind chemical residues in places like electrical sockets where bed bugs, cockroaches, and other pests might hide.
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Liquid Nitrogen Sprays Freeze Bed Bugs in Italy ...
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