Chattanooga Times Free Press

What else is out there? Bed bugs

Risk of picking these up at hotels, yard sales

- BY BRANDON PAYKAMIAN JOHNSON CITY PRESS

Ever since humans have gathered in groups, Cimex lectulariu­s, or bed bugs, have been causing problems for people.

Now that spring is in full swing and summer is just around the corner, it is important to watch out for these nasty little critters.

“They’re all ectothermi­c organisms, which means their operating body temperatur­e increases and decreases with the weather,” East Tennessee State University biology professor Karl Joplin says. “The ones that would live outside aren’t as functional when it’s cold, and that’s why they often prefer houses.”

While the warm weather presents an opportunit­y to visit yard sales and travel, University of Tennessee entomologi­st Karen Vail says these activities create a greater risk of bringing a bed bug infestatio­n home.

And bed bugs enjoy traveling just as much as humans do.

“Bed bugs are excellent hitchhiker­s. They can enter homes via infested luggage, backpacks, purses, clothing and furniture. Depending on their stage of life, bed bugs can be one twenty-fifth to one-third of an inch in size, which makes them extremely difficult to spot,” she says.

“A garage sale bargain

can quickly become expensive if it brings bed bugs into your home,” she adds.

While traveling, experts on these creepy-crawlies advise keeping luggage and suitcases away from the bed. If staying in a hotel, guests should inspect the room before unpacking to check for bed bugs along the mattress seams, headboard and other crevices.

Before leaving to head home after traveling, it’s important to make sure to check your luggage, and then wash and dry clothes when returning home.

“One thing that makes them hard to get rid of is that they’re very flat and can get into thin crevices and cracks. One of the most common ways to control them is a fogger, but the fogger doesn’t always get into these cracks,” Joplin says. “It’s extremely difficult to get rid of them.”

This can create problems in hotels, especially if clean sheets come into contact with infested sheets. Since bedbugs can rapidly reproduce, an infestatio­n can quickly get out of control, going from room to room.

“They have one of the more unique ways of sexual reproducti­on we know of called traumatic inseminati­on. It’s when the male essentiall­y ‘pokes’ the female in any place on the body and the sperm makes its way to the egg,” Joplin says. “This occurs in a few other insects, but it is not very common.”

Isolating these bugs isn’t much help either, according to Joplin. Bed bugs can survive up to a year without food.

“They tend to have a lower metabolism,” Joplin says. “When they don’t have food, they can go dormant and live on the stored reserves they’ve accumulate­d.”

If you do come into contact with bed bugs in the coming months, you’ll need profession­al help to get rid of them.

“The eggs turn out to be fairly resistant to methods for control, so even if you can get rid of a current infestatio­n, the eggs can still hatch, and you’ll get another batch set up again,” Joplin says.

Brandon Paykamian is a reporter for the Johnson City (Tennessee) Press.

 ?? PHOTO FROM CENTERS FOR DISEASE CONTROL AND PREVENTION ?? Bed bug (Cimex lectulariu­s)
PHOTO FROM CENTERS FOR DISEASE CONTROL AND PREVENTION Bed bug (Cimex lectulariu­s)

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