Can You See Bed Bugs ?
Can You See Bed Bugs? Yes, you can but, Detecting bed bugs can be difficult,
as they are small in size and able to hide in tiny cracks and crevices.
However, evidence of a bed bug infestation may be found in bedding and on
mattresses. Live bed bugs leave clusters of dark brown or black spots of dried
excrement on infested surfaces. Bed bugs also exude a subtle, sweet, musty odor.
Bites on the skin are a poor indicator
of a bed bug infestation. Bed bug bites can look like bites from other insects
(such as mosquitoes or chiggers), rashes (such as eczema or fungal infections),
or even hives. Some people do not react to bed bug bites at all.
Looking for Signs of Bed Bugs
A more
accurate way to identify a possible infestation is to look for physical signs
of bed bugs. When cleaning, changing bedding, or staying away from home, look
for:
- Rusty or reddish
stains on bed sheets or mattresses caused by bed bugs being crushed.
- Dark spots (about
this size: •), which are bed bug excrement and may bleed on the fabric
like a marker would.
- Eggs and
eggshells, which are tiny (about 1mm) and pale yellow Skins that
nymphs shed as they grow larger.
- Live bed bugs.
Where Bed Bugs Hide
When
not feeding, bed bugs hide in a variety of places. Around the bed, they can be found near the piping, seams, and tags of the mattress and box spring,
and in cracks on the bed frame and headboard.
If the
room is heavily infested, you may find
bed bugs:
- In the seams of chairs and couches, between cushions, in the folds of curtains.
- In drawer joints.
- In electrical receptacles and appliances.
- Under loose wallpaper and wall hangings.
- At the junction where the wall and the ceiling meet.
- Even in the head of a screw.
Since
bed bugs are only about the width of a credit card, they can squeeze into
really small hiding spots. If a crack holds
a credit card, it could hide a bed bug.
If you have detected a bed bug
infestation within your home, contact a pest control professional to discuss
treatment options.
Bed Bug
Behavior and Habit
Understanding
the behavior of bed bugs (how they eat, live, and reproduce) will help you to
find an infestation before it becomes established and to monitor for the presence
of bed bugs after your home has been treated.
Feeding:
- Appear to prefer
to feed on humans, but will feed on other mammals and birds as well.
- Will readily
travel 5-20 feet from established hiding places (called harborage) to feed
on a host.
- Even though they
are primarily active at night, if hungry they will seek hosts in full
daylight.
- Feeding can take
3-12 minutes.
- The rusty or tarry
spots found on bed sheets or in bug hiding places are because 20% of the
time adults and large nymphs will void remains of earlier blood meals
while still feeding.
Life stages/mating:
- Bed bugs need at
least one blood meal before the individual bug can develop to the next of
the six life stages.
- They can feed
more than once.
- Each stage also
requires the molting of skin.
- To
continue to mate and produce eggs, both males and females must feed at least once
every 14 days.
- Each female may
lay 1 to 3 eggs per day and 200-500 eggs per her lifetime (6-12 months but
could be longer).
- The egg-to-egg
life cycle may take four to five weeks under favorable conditions.
Living conditions:
- Bed bugs can
survive and remain active at temperatures as low as 7°C (46°F), but they
die when their body temperatures reach 45°C (113°F).
- To
kill bed bugs with heat, the room must be even hotter to ensure
sustained heat reaches the bugs no matter where they are hiding.
- Common bed bugs are found almost anywhere their host can
live.
- Tropical bed bugs (Cimex
hemipterous) require a higher average temperature than the
common bed bug and are found in
tropical and subtropical areas.



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