Bed Bug Insecticide

Bed Bug Monitors – The Game Changer In The Fight Against Bed Bugs
Author: Douglas Stern
The “pest of the 21st century” is what urban entomologist Michael Potter calls the tiny, blood-sucking pests that are spreading panic across the country. A leading expert on the habits and resurgence of Cimex lectularius, the common bed bug, the University of Kentucky researcher has found that modern bed bugs are increasingly resistant to pyrethroid insecticides commonly used to control them. Even worse, bed bugs are passing this resistance onto their offspring. Already a problem for apartment owners and property managers, a super bed bug is not a welcome thought, particularly with pending state legislation and new municipal regulations getting ready to place the onus for dealing with these problem pests at landlords’ doorsteps.
Bed bugs have been sharing beds with humans for centuries. After World War II, DDT effectively annihilated the pest in America and Western countries, although bed bugs continued to flourish in less developed countries. The banning of DDT coupled with the growth of international travel has caused a resurgence of man’s age-old nemesis. Since the 1990s, reported bed bug infestations in the U.S. have increased 500%. Bed bugs are now common in all 50 states with infestations regularly reported in apartments, condominiums, hotels, college dormitories, office buildings, hospitals and private homes.
Adept hitchhikers, bed bugs travel into apartments on residents’ clothing, mattresses, furniture and inside packing boxes. Several recent infestations have been traced back to moving vans. Adult bed bugs are reddish brown and about the size of an apple seed, but nymphs and eggs are microscopic. Nuisance pests that feed on human blood, bed bugs do not transmit disease; but their bites can cause itchy, red welts, psychosomatic stress and severe allergic reactions. Feeding on sleeping humans at night, they hide in tiny crevices in or near beds between feedings. As an infestation grows, bed bugs spread to adjacent units through wall voids, electrical and plumbing conduits and air ducts. Bed bugs can easily be spread through an apartment complex via shared laundry facilities or maintenance workers.
Legally tasked with providing pest control services for tenants, New Jersey apartment owners are being now faced with losing the litigation war on bed bug treatment as well. With new pending legislation (New Jersey #A 3203), apartment owners may soon have to bear the responsibility and financial expense of providing housing that is rat, roach and soon to be bed bug-free. While other vermin can be eliminated with proper maintenance and control costs recouped in rent payments, bed bugs are an entirely different problem. Insects of convenience, they are not attracted by food or filth but are brought into apartments by residents. They are as likely to be found in upscale, well-maintained establishments as in tenements.
To date, efforts to combat bed bugs have focused on reactive measures focused on treating the problem after the fact. Cutting-edge technologies at both ends of the temperature spectrum are being used to control insecticide-resistant bugs. New bed bug monitoring and trapping products just coming onto the pest control market offer the first opportunity for proactive prevention. A game changer in the fight against bed bugs, bed bug monitors are the first 24/7 preventative tool available on the market. Not only could proactive use of bed bug monitors become a powerful tool in protecting property and tenants, but they could turn the tide in the courtroom. In defending against bed bug litigation, regular monitor use could positively influence judges and juries in favor of apartment owners.
Monitors have the potential to alert property managers to bed bugs in the early stages of infestation while they are confined to the bed and bedroom. Early detection can allow property owners to arrange professional extermination of an affected apartment before pests spread. If bed bugs are discovered, monitors can determine the effectiveness of treatment and warn of re-infection. Monitoring adjacent apartments can alert property managers to spreading bed bugs, allowing targeted pest control. Early detection and intervention could save apartment owners thousands of dollars in professional pest control costs.
As with any new field, innovative pest control professionals are experimenting with various bed bug monitoring products in the field to determine which are most effective in different situations. U.S. tests and European use indicate that proactive use of bed bug monitors has the potential to turn the tide in the bed bug battle. Some of the potentially game-changing products being introduced include:
NightWatch by BioSensory, Inc. uses heat and pheromone lures to attract and trap bed bugs, killing them with carbon dioxide.
Bug Dome, developed by Silvandersson, an eco-friendly Swedish manufacturer, plugs into any wall outlet, using heat to lure bed bugs into replaceable glue traps.
BB Alert Active from MIDMOS, popular in Europe, uses replaceable packets of a blood-mimicking chemical attractant to entice bed bugs into a glue trap.
CDC 3000 by Cimex Science is a discrete, portable, electric monitoring and trapping device the size of a briefcase. Mimicking the presence of a human body, it lures bugs within a six-foot radius, trapping them on sealed slides for counting and documentation, annihilating them with carbon dioxide. Safe for use around children and pets, it can be moved from room to room.
Climbup Insect Interceptor by Susan McKnight Inc. is an inexpensive, low-tech device that is placed under bed posts to monitor bed bug presence. Concentric plastic rings coated with slippery talc trap bugs as they climb toward or from a bed.
Bed bug dogs are specially trained to sniff out bed bugs. Capable of detecting pests within a three-foot radius, dogs quickly target treatment areas or verify treatment success.
Bed bug monitoring can protect apartment owners from law suits, reassure tenants, maintain property values and uphold reputations by enabling owners to certify their properties as bed bug-free. If bed bugs are discovered, bed bug monitors can minimize their spread and extermination expense. In the near future, regular use of bed bug monitors by purchase, rental or contracted services is expected to become a routine part of apartment maintenance. Bed bug monitors give apartment owners and property managers their first real 24/7 proactive weapon in the growing battle against bed bugs.
Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/business-articles/bed-bug-monitors-the-game-changer-in-the-fight-against-bed-bugs-1850078.html
About the Author
Douglas Stern is the managing partner of Stern Environmental Group and a bed bug extermination expert. His firm serves commercial and residential clients in New Jersey, New York City, New York, and Connecticut. His firm is located at 100 Plaza Drive in Secaucus, New Jersey. You can reach him toll free at 1-888-887-8376. Please visit us on the Web at www.SternEnvironmental.com.





November 30, -0001
12:00 am
Here it is http://www.amazon.com/gp/redirect.html?ie=UTF8&location=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.amazon.com%2Fgp%2Fsite-directory%2F&tag=funjok-20&linkCode=ur2&camp=1789&creative=9325
Good Luck!
November 30, -0001
12:00 am
For bed bugs? Take off all linens and freeze them for 24 hours and/or wash them in the hottest water possible. Do the same with any clothing in the room. Steam clean the mattress all over as well as the carpets. Vacuum in mattress seams, corners and drawers and freeze the vacuum bag. These steps will kill many of them for you off the bat.
Most pesticides contain the ingredients (dichlorvos, permethrin and malathion) to get rid of the rest, but bedbugs are VERY persistent and good at hiding. Best bet is to call the Orkin man.
One good step is prevention. A bedbug can live a year without food (you). Don’t make it easy on them. Isolate your bed the best you can to keep them from feeding on you.
November 30, -0001
12:00 am
Get an exterminator in there as quickly as possible so the chemicals that are used will be gone before the baby arrives. Also let the exterminator know that you sister is pregnant so he will use non toxic chemcials. Good luck.
November 30, -0001
12:00 am
One more thing you might try before calling the exterminator or buying new mattresses…
Bed bugs also like to hide behind baseboards or between the cracks in paneling during the day. Vacuum every nook and cranny you can find using that skinny attachment for the end of your vacuum cleaner hose so you can really get in there. Repeat every few days for a few weeks to catch any newly hatched bugs. Vacuum on a regular basis and change your sheets at least once a week to deter reinfestation.
Good luck!
March 9, 2006
9:01 pm
How can I find and get rid of bed bugs?
I have bed bugs. I get multiple bites on my hands almost every night.
I have enclosed the boxspring with a latex cover, but the bites continue. I’ve sprayed with Home Depot insecticide, which says on the bottle that it kills bedbugs. I’ve sprayed every inch of my bedroom with this junk, multiple MULTIPLE times, including spraying the mattress. I’ve also done the routine of washing all bedding in hot water (I do it just about weekly).
I’ve spent so much money on this, it’s ridiculous, from replacing pillows to paying exterminators to buying mattress enclosures. Do I really have to just accept that insects dine on my blood nightly and smear it on my sheets as they depart? Do I have to move and trash all furniture and belongings? Should I go to bed in a beekeeper’s suit? What’s a guy to do?
April 3, 2009
2:57 am
Where do You buy Insecticide to treat bed bugs?
My sister has bed bugs and we need to get her home together before her new baby is born . Where can we get a good inexpensive insecticide or pesticide. What exactly do we need? We already threw the mattress out and shes staying with me for a while until we can fix this problem please help and any ignorant comments keep them to yourself Thanks
April 3, 2009
2:59 am
Where do I buy inexpensive insecticide or pesticide to treat bed bugs?
My sister has bed bugs and we need to get her home together before her new baby is born . Where can we get a good inexpensive insecticide or pesticide. What exactly do we need? We already threw the mattress out and shes staying with me for a while until we can fix this problem please help and any ignorant comments keep them to yourself Thanks
April 3, 2009
3:03 am
Where do I buy insecticide or pesticide to treat bed bugs?
My sister has bed bugs and we need to get her home together before her new baby is born . Where can we get a good inexpensive insecticide or pesticide. What exactly do we need? We already threw the mattress out and shes staying with me for a while until we can fix this problem please help and any ignorant comments keep them to yourself Thanks
July 29, 2010
1:07 am
Any reliable insecticides can treat bed bugs beside pest control?