5 Great Bed Bug Truths - Know Your Enemy Well
1. Bug's Life - The Real picture of Bed Bugs
Cartoon makers and consuming movies make them like cute diminutive creatures. Thus we find amusing bugs images in contemporary day kids' books, comic magazines, and commercials with characters imitating human attributes. But to most adults, bed bugs appear nasty because of the known issue they bring.
2. The Real picture
Bed bugs are so tiny which could be mistaken as ticks and cockroaches because of their corporal appearance. They are as small as 1/4 inch in size, with flat oval shape and wingless. They belong to the insect specie Cimicidae and specifically classified in entomology as the "Cimes Lectularius."
Under naked eyes, they look just like tiny apple seeds. One cannot see the real image of bed bugs without an aid of a magnifying tool. To be able to study its external anatomy, it must done straight through a low powered microscope. Bed bugs appearance and color is similar to young cockroach minus the wings and the long hind legs. Its is reddish brown in color. Tiny hairs running over their backs form stripes. The bed bug's armor are translucent especially those of the young ones. Like other insects, their body sustain is the armor itself, meaning they have no bones. Their body is shaped as flat and oval. They grow to a size of about 5mm or .039 inch. Its size and shape enables them to hide in intricate crevices of beds and furnitures and dark places nearby the house.
Just by looking at them, it would appear that they are tiny innocent and harmless creatures. But if we will intimately seek their lifestyle, it will be found that they employ a very smart ideas of feeding, traveling and reproducing.
2. Feeding
Bed bugs are nocturnal insects who sleep by day and active at night time. They are attracted to human body temperature and carbon dioxide it exhales. They assault their victims at the time they are fast asleep which is about 4 am or an hour before dawn. These pests have two hollow tubes as their mouth which pierces the skin of their host. One of the tubes injects saliva with anticoagulants and anesthetics. The other one is used to suck blood. The anesthetic substance keeps them feeding unnoticed until they are full. They do this for some minutes. When they are done, the itchiness could only be felt after an hour and swelling of skin could happen.
3. Traveling
Bed Bugs voyage with humans as they migrate from one place to another. They voyage in their luggage, beddings, in the furnitures that get transported. Experts even recommend that Bed Bugs followed humanity from the age of the cavemen to civilization. They cannot fly nor jump but they are sure good crawlers. If one may find a nesting ground, they scamper away like ants upon a sense of vibration and appearance of light. They go on top of a bed or furniture by crawling straight through the crevices of walls and ceilings then fall down. That is why to catch them, it is best to do it by waking up gently at an hour before dawn then make use of a flashlight to beam on their suspected hiding place in the mattresses, beddings, chairs and sofas or places that citizen used to rest and stay.
4. Reproducing
Bed bugs multiply very productively. Its eggs are approximately indiscernible to the naked eye. So diminutive and light weight they can be carried by dusts and wind. It is resilient that it can hatch itself without the aid of its mom after about 10 days. Bed Bugs can get pregnant 500 times in its lifetime. It can fertilize 300 eggs in one fertilization then lay them at about 5 eggs per day. This is the fancy why female pregnant bed bugs get enlarged than the male counterparts.
Pictures of bed bugs show that their external armor protects them from environmental hazards and pesticides. Only a few chemicals are productive in killing them. The most productive was the Ddt that approximately eradicated their species in the United States in the 1950s. However, due to health hazard concern to humans they were banned in the 60s.
5. There are two ways to control bed bugs infestation. Chemical and non-chemical methods
Chemical Methods
Two beloved forms are the inorganic diatomaceous earth and the silica aerogel. They are desiccants located in their hiding places to condense the bugs. The chemicals are safe for humans and domestic animals. Pyrethroids are liquid insecticide chemicals used as repellant to prevent bed bugs from creeping back into inherent hiding places.
Non-chemical Method
a) Vacuum Cleaning -daily vacuuming of mattresses, furnitures, beddings and crevices of places where bed bugs hide. Content of the vacuum bag must be burned or disposed of carefully.
b) Steam clean and Hot drying - Steam cleaning and hot drying of beddings, carpets and curtains.
c) Housekeeping - say good housekeeping of hiding places like cabinets, drawers, stockrooms, etc.
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