Category Archives: Bed Bugs North Carolina

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Latest Bed Bug Incidents and Infestations

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Bedbugs – Biology and Control | NC State Extension …

Bedbugs have become a common problem across the country infestations showing up in residences, hotels, college campuses and other places. Many people associate bedbugs with unsanitary conditions, as often is the case with pests such as cockroaches. However, bedbug infestations occur across the spectrum of social and economic settings. Experts have speculated that the increase is more likely due to a number of factors such as increased travel and tourism, changes in tactics used for controlling pests such as cockroaches, and an increasing resistance by bedbugs to the most commonly used insecticides.

Our primary concern is with the common bedbug, Cimex lectularius. Another species in the bedbug family (Cimicidae), Cimex hemipterus, is usually found in more tropical areas and may show up particularly for people engaged in international travel. A number of other species are more frequently associated with birds and bats but on occasion invade homes.

Bedbugs adults are reddish-brown, oval, flattened insects about 316 long and up 18 wide (Figure 1). Engorged (blood-fed) adults are swollen and dull red. Though wingless, adult bedbugs do have small wing pads. The dark-colored eyes stand out and the sides of the collar-like pronotum curve slightly around the head and is covered with long hairs. The nymphs (immatures) resemble the adult but are smaller in size. Newly hatched nymphs are almost colorless whereas engorged (blood-fed) nymphs are reddish and swollen. Bedbug eggs are white, oval eggs about 1 mm long.

Figure 1. Bedbug.

Although humans are the preferred host, bedbugs feed on many warm-blooded animals including rats, mice, dogs, cats, poultry, and other birds. Bats, swallows, and chimney swifts may serve as hosts and may be responsible for causing infestations in or around buildings but they are more typically fed upon by other species in those situations.

There has been no scientifically-based evidence showing that bedbugs transmit diseases. Our major concern is more about the affect of their feeding. Bedbugs do not bore into the skin. They insert their mouthparts into the host's skin and suck out blood. As bedbugs feed, they inject saliva which may produces an allergic reaction that often causes slightly delayed swelling, itching, and irritation that can persist for a week or more. Large infestations of bedbugs may have a noticeable "sweet" odor.

Bedbugs can feed and breed year round under favorable conditions. They typically hide during the day in mattresses or cracks and crevices. Figure 2 shows a bedbug and fecal stains in a mattress seam. Under favorable conditions, each female lays 200 to 500 eggs. When the insects feed regularly, eggs are laid in batches of 10 to 50 at 3 to 15-day intervals. Maximum egg laying occurs when the temperature is above 70F (21C). Eggs are typically not deposited when temperatures drop below 50F (10C). The eggs are coated with a sticky substance that dries after the egg is deposited and causes the eggs to adhere to the object on which they were deposited. Eggs and the eggshells are found, singly or in clusters, in or near the crevices bedbugs are hiding. At temperatures above 21C (70F), eggs hatch in about 10 days. At lower temperatures, hatching may take as long as 28 days.

Newly hatched bugs feed at the first opportunity. They molt five times before reaching maturity and require at least one blood meal between each molt. Immature stages can survive more than two months without feeding; however, most nymphs usually develop into adults within 2 to 6 weeks. Indoors, three or four annual generations may be produced and you will find all stages of bedbugs in an established infestations. Bedbug adults can survive up to a year or more without feeding, which means that infestations may continue to survive even if a house was left vacant for several months.

Bedbugs cannot fly or jump and do not normally crawl long distances. Their primary means of dispersal is through human activity, i.e., people move them from one place to another in luggage, laundry, etc. Animals, particularly birds and bat, may be involved in bed / bat bug dispersal. Piles of cast nymphal skins often accumulate in bedbug hiding places. Figure 3 shows piles of shed skins at the base of bed headboard.

Figure 2. Bedbug and fecal smears on mattress.

Figure 3. Bedbug skins at the base of a headboard.

STEP ONE - confirm that you do have bedbugs. Bedbug bites often leave a reddish slightly swollen welt that can resemble a mosquito bite but typically last longer. Some people do not react as severely. The bites may be in a pattern of 3-4 in a row (depending on the number of bedbugs present and how a person lies on a mattress). However, a bedbug problem cannot be reliably identified solely on the basis of welts or other seemingly insect-related bite marks. It is critical to find actual evidence of the bedbugs: actual insects, shed skins, fecal spots, etc. as shown Figure 2 and Figure 3.

Most of our infestations have been true bedbugs, but on occasion we have had bat bugs and swallow bugs which are difficult to distinguish without a microscope or high magnification lens. A pest control service may be able to help you or you can contact your local county Cooperative Extension center. If you do have bat bugs, check attics, eaves and roof overhangs for signs of bat. If you have bats roosting in your attic, contact a pest control company or wildlife damage control company in your area for assistance. Although most of our bedbug problems are not associated with birds or bats, it's always a good idea to confirm that they are not the source of an infestation or other potential problems. Remove old nesting material as well.

STEP TWO - locate all of their hiding places

STEP THREE - control

Chemical ControlThe next step is to treat bedbug hiding places and his requires work on your part There a many products available for bedbug control. Many people prefer to use less toxic "natural" products; however, most of these chemicals work strictly as contact insecticides, i.e., they must be applied directly to the insects in order to kill them and there is no residual effect meaning that once the chemical dries it will not affect other bedbugs that come into contact with it. Other insecticides leave a residual that remains active for weeks or months after theyre applied. READ THE PRODUCT LABEL TO MAKE SURE YOU UNDERSTAND HOW THE PRODUCT WORKS. Some products are applied as surface sprays (to exposed surfaces) while other treatments are applied only as "crack and crevice" to gaps around baseboards and other such areas and items where bedbugs hide. Insecticidal dust formulations such as diatomaceous earth, silica gel, and more common dust insecticides provide longer residual in these locations. Not all dust products are available to the general public and care is needed when applying them to avoid inhaling the product while applying it. Pesticide applications to furniture, particularly mattresses, should be limited (and perhaps best left to a pest control professional).

Many pest control services now recommend (or require) that treated mattresses and box springs be placed inside sealable casements (Figure 7) that prevent bedbugs from escaping the treatment and also keep other bedbugs from re-infesting the items. When treating furniture for bedbugs make sure you use only products that are labeled for application to these items. You can click on the following links for examples of pesticides available to the general public and pest management professionals. Always read the label and follow directions and safety precautions. Here are some important reminders about using pesticides:

For extreme or difficult infestations, fumigation may be used. Fumigation is not the same as using a "fogger" (total release aerosol). Foggers are not effective in eliminating bedbug infestations. Fumigation uses a toxic gas and you must either seal the entire house (or entire apartment building) or place furniture and other items into an isolated container (e.g., a panel truck or steel storage container) and sealed for treatment (Figure 8). Fumigating an entire house (or apartment) may require that the entire building be covered with a tarpaulin (or completely sealed) in order to treat it. Fumigation will kill all of the bedbugs and is an alternative to other insecticide applications if an entire house is infested; however, it leaves no residual (killing) insecticide.

Non-Chemical Control

Some people prefer to dispose of infested mattresses and other furniture rather than deal with treating them. It is important to dispose of these items properly. First, you must wrap the items in plastic sheeting before carrying it outdoors so your bedbugs do not crawl onto you or drop off indoors unseen which may further spread the infestation. Second, whether you live in a house or an apartment building, never put infested furniture at the curb or next to a dumpster (Figure 9) (if allowed) without first rendering it unusable (e.g., cutting the fabric). Otherwise, someone may take the items which only spreads the bedbug problem further. If you replace infested items, do not bring them into the house until you know you have the problem under control or else these new items will become infested. Clothing and some other items that are infested (or suspected of being infested) can be washed in hot water (or follow the tag on the article); however, washing alone will not always kill bedbugs and their eggs. Heat (drying in clothes dryer on high for about 30 miinutes or until dry) will kill them. Other items may require dry cleaning which can become an expensive option. Simply isolating clothing or other infested items in trash bags may work but remember that bedbugs can survive for more than six months without feeding.

Physical barriers such as double-sided tape on the legs of beds can help keep bedbugs from crawling onto the frame. There are also commercial traps available online that claim to stop bedbugs from migrating onto beds from surrounding areas. However, none of these barriers will help unless you keep bedspreads, blankets, etc. from touching the floor and providing bedbugs with an "alternate route" onto the bed. Keep in mind that these physical barriers help but they are not a fix for bedbug infestation.

Many pest control companies now offer freezing and / or steam treatments for some types of infested furniture such as mattresses and box springs. Another control method that has proven to be effective is heat treatment. This requires that all of the suspected items or in many cases the entire living area be sealed and heated for several hours to > 120F (Figure 10). Heat treatments are not simply a matter of raising the air temperature. The heated air must penetrate all areas of the room / house in order to kill bedbugs that are hiding in household articles, in furniture or clothing, or even in walls. Excessive heating can damage furniture, electronics, and other items and may even start a fire if not done properly

The best approach to dealing with bedbugs combines both chemical and non-chemical methods in order to provide a greater likelihood of control. However, even with the use of fumigation, heat and/or conventional insecticides, there is currently no treatment method that can prevent bedbugs from being reintroduced into and reinfesting a home or any other building.

Figure 4. Look carefully for bedbugs.

Figure 5. Check under furniture for bedbugs.

Figure 6. Check fabric under chairs for evidence of bedbugs.

Figure 7. Mattress encasements.

Rick Cooper, Cooper Pest Solutions, Lawrenceville, NJ

Rick Cooper, Cooper Pest Solutions, Lawrenceville, NJ

Figure 8. Fumigation truck.

Figure 9. Do not dispose of infested furniture without rendering it unusable.

Figure 10. Heat treatment for bedbugs.

You never know when and where you might pick up bedbugs. Higher priced hotels or vacation rental properties are no less susceptible to getting bedbugs, but they often have budgets that accommodate more preventive approaches. However, even with the best preventive efforts, almost any property can become home to these hitchhiking pests. The key is to be attentive and prevent the problem from becoming worse. Here are some measures you can take to reduce the likelihood of a problem:

Figure 11. Keep luggage off the floor at hotels and check shelves before placing luggage on them.

Publication date: Nov. 1, 2010

Recommendations for the use of agricultural chemicals are included in this publication as a convenience to the reader. The use of brand names and any mention or listing of commercial products or services in this publication does not imply endorsement by North Carolina Cooperative Extension nor discrimination against similar products or services not mentioned. Individuals who use agricultural chemicals are responsible for ensuring that the intended use complies with current regulations and conforms to the product label. Be sure to obtain current information about usage regulations and examine a current product label before applying any chemical. For assistance, contact your county Cooperative Extension agent.

North Carolina State University and North Carolina A&T State University commit themselves to positive action to secure equal opportunity regardless of race, color, creed, national origin, religion, sex, age, veteran status or disability. In addition, the two Universities welcome all persons without regard to sexual orientation.

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North Carolinas misguided Landlord/Tenant Bed bug …

The North Carolina Senate will be considering a bill in 2012 that would have a huge impact on how landlords and tenants deal with bed bugs and who pays for treatment in the state.

H721, also known as the Landlord/Tenant/Bedbug Liability bill, passed in the North Carolina House in June. I have some concerns about its provisions.

The bill would prohibit landlords from renting a unit known to be infested by bed bugs. However, if the landlord gets an inspection from a licensed inspector, prior to leasing the unit, with a written report stating no bed bug evidence was found, then the landlord wont be liable if a problem is discovered later.

If the landlord does not get an inspection before renting the unit, and then a tenant complains bed bugs are present within 60 days of renting the unit, the landlord must hire someone to treat within five days of this complaint. All neighboring units must also be inspected.

Landlords must also provide educational materials about bed bugs to new tenants.

The bill also requires tenants to refrain from knowingly introducing bed bugs to the unit, stating: tenants shall not knowingly or recklessly introduce onto the premises any person or thing infested with bedbugs.

Tenants must notify landlords in writing within five days of suspecting they may have bed bugs.

If the landlord got an inspection before the tenant moved in, or if more than sixty days have passed since the tenant moved in, the tenant must pay all costs of bed bug treatment hiring a firm within seven days.

This tenant would also need to cover any fees charged by the licensee [PCO] and any damages associated with the presence and elimination of bedbugs from the premises and any attached units and spaces.

[Emphasis added.]

My concerns:

Heres just one way this could go horribly wrong:

The instinct behind the bill to make things fairer for landlords, and to force both landlords and tenants to work together to fight bed bugs is not a bad one.

I understand the need for landlords and tenants to share the burden of eliminating bed bug problems. It isnt fair for landlords to shoulder the entire costs of bed bug problems which are invariably brought in by tenants, guests, or maintenance workers, or which come from an attached building owned by someone else.

On the other hand, it also isnt fair to create a system in which responsibility can be evaded as simply as this, or where an inspection holds more weight than is due.

It really is not possible for inspectors to sign off on units with 100% certainty theyre clear.And tenants who dont report problems promptly but instead put up with the problem for a while will be rewarded when their neighbor gets bed bugs and reports their own problems, then becoming liable for the costs of treatment for all units.

You cant really legislate who pays for bed bug treatment based on the blame game. Blame for bringing bed bugs into a particular structure is just far too difficult to discern in many cases.

This bill was dreamed up by people who dont know a lot about how bed bugs operate, or how difficult it is to determine with 100% certainty whether theyre present or not. Not surprisingly, it was initiated by a rental housing industry group.

Because posts about legislation under consideration often cause confusion to readers, I stress that this bill has not been made into a law, but be warned: it will come up for consideration in the North Carolina Senate in 2012.

You can download the full text of H721 from the North Carolina General Assemblys website (PDF).

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North Carolina, United States Bed Bug Registry Map Bed …

Owners- Please take a look at this law. Continue reading

by: Cox Media Group National Content Desk Updated: Aug 17, 2017 8:26 AM A report released earlier this yearmorning names Baltimore as the city with the most bed bugs in the country. The Maryland city moved up nine spots from its 2016 ranking. Washington, D.C., Chicago, New York City and Columbus, Ohio, rounded out the top five. Continue reading

This image of a taxonomic network of bacterial diversity on bedbugs comes from Michael Fisher, who won first place for graduate students and postdocs in the graphics category. Click to see a larger version on Flickr Continue reading

State pest management association offers tips for preventing spread of bed bugs Raleigh, N.C. Summer travel seasons kicks off this weekend and the North Carolina Pest Management Association (NCPMA) is urging North Carolinians to be vigilant in protecting themselves from bed bug infestations. Bed bugs are easy to transport from one place to another Continue reading

Written By Peg Godwin and last updated by Jennifer Stroud Bed bugs are an increasing problem as they have found their way into homes, hospitals, hotels and other places. Bed bugs can infest any home regardless of income or maintenance Continue reading

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North Carolina Bed Bug Law – Property Management Wilmington NC

Owners- Please take a look at this law.

The law reads:

The landlord shall not offer for lease any premises that, at the time the landlord and tenant enter into a rental agreement, the landlord knows to be infested by the species cimex lectularius, also known as bedbugs. The landlord may, prior to leasing the premises, obtain an inspection from a licensee under 12 G.S. 106-65.24(15)(ie: a licenced pest exterminator). If no evidence is found, the written report of the inspection shall serve as evidence of the landlords compliance with the provisions of this subdivision. G.S. 42-43.1 and this subdivision shall comprise the sole and exclusive duties of a landlord relating to an infestation of cimex lectularius, also known as bedbugs; no other subsection of this section shall be construed to impose any duties or obligations upon a landlord relating to an infestation of bedbugs.

Bud bug extermination costs can be expensive (example: 1392 sf home can cost $700 to $1700). Given this can happen anywhere and to anyone, the cost of inspection, $75 for example, can be less expensive, a good risk management tool and can make owners in compliance of the law. Another way to put it simply is to say not my issue Mr. Tenant please take care of this yourself. Now, tenant can move out and not tell the owner about the existence of bed bugs. At this point the tenant is in violation of the law and their lease. The extermination can come out of their security deposit. Owners- please consider pre inspection for bed bugs as a way to control your costs and reduce your risk. Please call for more information.

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North Carolina Bed Bug Law - Property Management Wilmington NC

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Bedbugs and Mars: Graphics Winners of the 2017 NC State Research Image Contest – NC State News

This image of a taxonomic network of bacterial diversity on bedbugs comes from Michael Fisher, who won first place for graduate students and postdocs in the graphics category. Click to see a larger version on Flickr.

First place for graphics and illustration among faculty and staff goes to a Mars map from Paul Byrne, an assistant professor in the Department of Marine, Earth and Atmospheric Sciences who specializes in planetary geology.

The planet Mars has fascinated humanity for thousands of years, Byrne says. Recent spacecraft missions have returned an unprecedented view of the Red Planet, equipping us with new information with which to understand Mars geological history. Here, topographic data for the entire planet show the vast, low-lying plains to the north, enormous impact basins in the southern hemisphere and, to the west, the largest volcanoes in the solar system the tallest of which, Olympus Mons, towers 21 km above its surroundings!

Mars is very like our own world in some respects, yet vastly different in others, Byrne adds. Exploring the Red Planet in three dimensions that is, with both photographic images and topography we can start to investigate questions impossible to tackle with images alone. As a result, data sets like this one (global topography from the Mars Orbiter Laser Altimeter instrument, flown on NASAs Mars Global Surveyor) enable us to understand when and where volcanic activity was prevalent on Mars, for example, which in turn tells us when the planet was geologically active, and possibly why its no longer active today.

The first place winner for graduate students and postdocs is Michael Fisher (for the image at the top of this post), a Ph.D. student in the Department of Entomology and Plant Pathology, whose image shows an Operational Taxonomic Unit (OTU) network that illustrates the diversity of bacteria among bed bug populations around North Carolina. Each colored dot in the center represents a different sample location around the state. The sand-colored dots on the periphery correspond to an individual OTU of bacteria connected by the blue lines, shedding light on the relationships. The bed bug gut microbiome remains poorly understood, including bacterial species abundance, diversity, and dynamics. This project examined the gut microbiome of the common bed bug Cimex lectularius from 15 populations around North Carolina.

Bed bugs have not been largely implicated in the epidemiology of disease transmission, but they can acquire a myriad of pathogens from their hosts, and may be important vectors of bacterial pathogens, Fisher says. Additionally, several species of insecticide-degrading bacteria were discovered, which may suggest a newly-discovered mechanism of insecticide resistance in bed bugs yet to be investigated.

The second-place submission among faculty was Rich Spontak, Distinguished Professor of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering. His image, which he calls Plates on Lava, is an unedited confocal laser scanning microscope gif of a polymer film composed of a special type of Polyhedral Oligomeric Silsesquioxane (POSS) solvent-casted with PEO (Polyethylene oxide).

Note the segregated plaque-like phase domains (purple-blue colored), formed by POSS crystals, Spontak says. This is the first observation of plaque-like phase domains produced in a polymer film by non-covalently bonded POSS. We are beginning to understand the driving force(s) behind these plaque-shaped domains. Besides the thermodynamic relation between POSS and polymer, the main influence comes from the solvent. The solvent molecules help POSS molecules to interlock themselves like LEGO pieces. Thus we observe the POSS plaque formations on the polymer, which seem like continental plates floating on lava.

Spontak notes that the related research is important because POSS is a unique 3D hybrid molecule that fuses in organic as well as inorganic chemistry. Since it improves thermal and mechanical properties of polymeric materials, it is applicable in a wide range of industries from electronic to biomedical applications. In particular, this study shows how plaque-like POSS domains can be formed on polymer films as a protection shield without making any chemical reaction between POSS and polymer molecules. This approach is an easy way to protect polymeric materials against oxidation, X-rays, UV-light and thermal radiation.

The second place submission among students was from Dheepak Nandkishore Khatri, a masters student in the Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, for a sound localization image.

This picture shows the universal response of an array of microphones designed and signal-processed to receive sound only from desired locations, Khatri says. The red and black zones are zones of destructive interference, i.e., no sound is recorded from these zones, thus receiving sound only from the white pillars you see in the image.

Localization of sound is beneficial in many engineering applications, where sound from only certain locations is desired, Khatri says. Localization can be achieved using an array of microphones, making it a simple and cost-effective solution.

Note: You can find the work from winners in all of the research image contest categories here.

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Bedbugs and Mars: Graphics Winners of the 2017 NC State Research Image Contest - NC State News

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