This New York Times article references a case of bed bugs at the Ritz-Carlton in New York City — but that’s not the story. Bed bugs can be present in any hotel, any time.  They arrive and depart with all kinds of people, after all.

The issue here is that while the hotel apparently responded promptly to a guest’s complaint about bed bugs, a member of the housekeeping staff claims that in this instance, she was not notified of the problem promptly.
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Bravo to Christopher Evans, for his editorial responding to this piece of [bed bug fecal matter] entitled “EPA Hands Out $1M in ‘Environmental Justice’ Grants,” (broadcast on Fox News on 1/6/12) where Neil Cavuto and Chris Horner rant about the use of tax dollars for “environmental justice” projects.

Among Cavuto’s concerns is the EPA’s $25,000 grant awarded to “Cleveland Tenants Org. Cleveland OH. Educating Landlords, Tenants About Safer Bed Bug Control Options.”

Interestingly, and surely for effect, I note that Cavuto omitted the word “Small” from “Environmental Justice Grants” — the CTO actually received one of the EPA’s “Environmental Justice Small Grants” [emphasis added].

But including the full title of the grant program would perhaps have included too much factual information and detracted from Cavuto’s and Horner’s opportunity to rail against out-of-control “social justice” spending.

The facts?
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Ahhhh, the laundry problem.


Image credit: Carlos Porto / FreeDigitalPhotos.net

People with bed bugs are often told that laundry can be washed/dried on hot, simply dried on hot, or dry cleaned.  The latter, however, is a can of worms carpet beetle larvae.

The CBC reports that “many dry cleaners” in Edmonton won’t treat bed bug-infested clothing, or will do so only if precautions are taken by the consumer when bringing them in:
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Again and again, journalists point out that bed bugs are “about the size of” apple seeds, or that they even “look like” apple pips.

You don’t have to look to the media reports for this cliché — it’s found in everything from the National Pesticide Information Center and Indiana University fact sheets, to give just two examples (NPIC notes “adults are about the size of an apple seed”).

It’s such a commonplace in writing about these bugs and I don’t doubt that I said it many times myself.

However, entomologist Lou Sorkin has a response to this idea: not so.

Of course, a visual is most helpful in convincing us Lou is right.  And now we have one.  Here’s an excellent comparison of bedbugs and apple pips, from Lou:

 

Apples and Oranges? Bed Bugs and Apple Seeds.

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The product manufacturer produced the following videos to demonstrate use of the original Packtite to kill bed bugs and eggs in various items including linens, shoes, stuffed animals, and books.

There are also videos below demonstrating Packtite set-up and effectiveness.  Thanks to David James and the Packtite crew for providing these helpful videos.
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Followers of references to bed bugs in the non-pest-related media will enjoy this: Tom Tomorrow introduces “Bedbug Man” in his “The Modern World” comic, “a superhero with the proportionate powers of a bed bug.”

These powers, as you might guess, include being able to “hide almost anywhere” and being “really annoying.”

Check out:

Daily Kos: Bedbug Man.

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Bedbugger.com is pleased to announce another giveaway! This isn’t our usual contest, however.  Please read the information below carefully and follow the instructions to enter.

Bed Bugs Limited in London (UK) have developed a new version of the Passive monitor which is called a Passive+ and they are asking for your help to collect some field data on the effectiveness of the product in both detecting and eradicating bedbugs.  The drawing is open to anyone who either currently suspects a bedbug infestation or is currently suffering with bed bugs.
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A new article by Katherine Harmon in Scientific American explores genetic research into bed bugs, which may be used to explain how they spread and thrive.

North Carolina State Entomologist Dr. Coby Schal and other researchers (including Drs. Warren Booth and Ed Vargo of NCSU and Changlu Wang of Rutgers) have been collecting samples from around the US and from within individual buildings, to learn more about how they were introduced and about their genetic diversity.

Harmon writes,

A genetic survey across the U.S. found that among towns, bedbugs have great genetic variation. That diversity suggests that, rather than having been brought into the country only a few times, the parasites crossed the borders many times—and are likely continuing to do so. These founder bugs go on to create larger populations. Even in well-connected and highly populated cities on the Interstate 95 corridor along the east coast, bedbug populations remained relatively distinct from one another.

Within each domestic population, however, the genetic distribution is a much different story. In a single home or apartment building, for example, the bugs show “an extremely high rate of inbreeding,” Schal said. His team found that an entire population within an apartment building—such as were the cases in infested Jersey City, N.J., and Raleigh, N.C. buildings—was so genetically similar that it might have been founded by a single fertilized female. Bugs in the next generation then would have mated with one another, and so on, in a seemingly indefinite incestuous line.

Not only does bed bug inbreeding not appear to have the same negative effects that it can have in human and many other animal populations, but evidence found by the team in one building even suggested that, given other options, bed bugs may “prefer” it.

(Nasty little buggers!)

We first heard about this study when the researchers received a grant for it back in 2008 (this information forms a footnote to this interview with Dr. James Austin about bed bugs, chickens and DNA).   It is good to hear some of the results.

Another interesting soundbite from the article?  Dr. Kenneth Haynes of the University of Kentucky is cited as saying that bed bugs can move 2.5 meters in five minutes.

Nasty and fast.

A winning combination, unfortunately.

Haynes and Schal were among the speakers at the American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene meeting on December 6th, and additional articles shed more light on their research projects and findings.

Science News, Nature, and offer additional details on the work of Schal’s team, as well as on Ken Haynes’ work on genetics and pyrethroid resistance.

Science provides the abstracts for Schal’s teams’ two unpublished studies (which are under review) here (PDF) and here (PDF).

Interestingly, the BBC explores Schal’s hypothesis that bed bugs were reintroduced recently into the US from tropical countries where bed bugs persisted (and had developed resistance to heavily-used pesticides) after they had been virtually eradicated in the US.

When I say virtually, however, I note that there is evidence which suggests that bed bugs were never entirely eliminated in the US.  See the references former Bedbugger hopelessnomo provides in her comment on her Bedbugger article from 2008, in particular her comment dated 1/13/2008 at 10:35 pm — which affirm the presence of bed bugs in the US in the period from 1986-1999.

And that’s not counting the ones who lived with chickens.

The BBC cites Dr. Clive Boase,who reminds us once again that bed bugs were present in smaller numbers in the UK throughout the 1970s and 1980s, after DDT stopped being used, and notes that

“We don’t have to invoke stories of disease control programmes in Africa; all the evidence here in the UK is that our problem is home-grown.”

Dr Boase wondered that if the US had similar long-term records whether the researchers would have reached a different conclusion.

The BBC story also cites the University of Sheffield’s Dr. Richard Naylor (well known to Bedbugger forum users), who also questioned the team’s hypothesis:

“It doesn’t seem that difficult to develop resistance or lose it; in lab cultures, if you stop exposing [bed-bugs] to pyrethroids it drops out of lab populations very quickly,” he said.

Mr Naylor asked that if the US bed bugs had been exposed to the chemicals elsewhere in the past, “why would they still be resistant?”

The Science article suggests Schal is working on testing this hypothesis by collecting samples from abroad.

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Thanks to Bait for drawing our attention to the Scientific American article.  See more Bedbugger articles about Dr. Coby Schal.

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Mike Merchant’s reports from bed bug sessions at the ESA 2011 meeting in Reno

November 25, 2011

Entomologist Michael Merchant of the Texas AgriLife Extension has recently compiled a really interesting two-part series of blog posts on his Insects in the City blog, covering some of the interesting bed bug-related presentations at the 2011 Entomological Society of America conference in Reno. The Bed Bug Chronicles Part I describes the following: Changlu Wang’s research on the use [...]

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Sheilas’ Wheels Insurance covers bed bugs, but spreads misinformation

November 17, 2011

Why are people so ignorant about bed bugs?  Perhaps because the media keeps publishing misinformation about them! The latest example: the Daily Mail picks up a Sheilas’ Wheels Insurance press release about their annual “Bed Bug Audit,” which polls Brits about their domestic habits. The latest poll found that one in six British men wash [...]

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Bed bugs beware: NYC HPD acquires canine scent detection dogs

November 17, 2011

The Brooklyn Eagle reports that the New York City Housing and Preservation Department (the NYC agency that inspects private rental housing when bed bug complaints are filed with the city — for example, when tenants call 311 to report bed bugs) has acquired two bed bug sniffing beagles: The two male beagles, named Mickey and [...]

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Bed bugs allegedly bite “X Factor” finalists in LA hotel

November 13, 2011

Four finalists on the television talent show “X Factor” claim to have been bitten in the Grafton, their Los Angeles hotel, this week, according to TMZ, which notes the contestants have now been moved to new lodgings. However, our regular readers will likely be even more interested in the TMZ graphic accompanying the piece, which [...]

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