The occurrence of bed bug infestations in developed countries across the world has increased dramatically due to increased resistance to cer...
Case Studies
The current invasion of bed bugs into North America, Australia, and Western Europe is highlighted in a new study published by the Institute of Biology, London.
It's still unclear why the parasites are returning to cities where they were exterminated some 50 years ago. "The trend is very worrying," said the report's author, Clive Boase. "Since the mid-1990s, numbers of reported infestations have almost doubled annually."
In parts of London bed bug infestations have risen tenfold since 1996. In the US, the National Pest Management Association reports a 500 percent increase in bedbug numbers in the last few years.
Similarly, in Australia, there were as much as 700 percent more calls to pest control companies in the four-year period ending in 2004, compared with the previous four-year period, according to the Institute of Clinical Pathology and Medical Research (ICPMR) in New South Wales.
The bed bug's dramatic comeback is perplexing. The rebound comes even as other creepy crawlies, such as cockroaches and ants, are in retreat from people's homes. Possible factors fueling the bedbugs' global spread include growth in international travel, increased resistance to certain insecticides, and the introduction of new pest control methods that leave bed bugs unharmed. Yet the precise cause or causes of the problem are yet to be determined.
In the 1930s, the UK Ministry of Health stated, "In many areas all the houses are to a greater or lesser degree infested with bed bugs." But infestations quickly receded once synthetic pesticides such as DDT were introduced following World War II. By the 1980s bed bugs were almost nonexistent in Britain, the US, and many other developed countries.
No bigger than an apple seed, the bed bug is descended from plant-feeding insects that evolved skin-piercing mouthparts for sucking up blood. They are thought to have first gotten a taste for human blood when cave-dwelling humans lived beneath bug-infested bat roosts.
Bed bugs are notoriously difficult to locate. They hide in mattresses and furniture, under floorboards, and even inside electrical equipment, emerging to feed only when it's dark. Adults can survive up to a year without blood, allowing infestations to persist through periods when properties are vacant.
Side effects of bed bug bites include itchy body swellings, and in rare cases - usually involving people living in poverty - severe infestations may lead to severe blood loss, due to the volume of feeding by hundreds or even thousands of bed bugs. While studies have shown that HIV can survive on bed bugs' mouthparts for up to an hour, the insects are not known to be vectors for disease.
Attack Pest Control, <p>Hail Weston House,</p>
<p>Hail Weston,</p>
<p>St. Neots,</p>
<p>Cambridgeshire</p>
01480 223944