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Science Friday
Do-it-yourself bed-bug detector
With bed-bug numbers on the rise in North America, researchers test homemade bug finders
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FIND MEBed bugs searching for a nice blood dinner find plumes of breathlike carbon dioxide enticing. Designs for homemade pest detectors are turning this taste for carbon dioxide against the bugs.Clemson University, USDA Cooperative Extension Slide Series

INDIANAPOLIS — After trying some 50 arrangements of household objects, researchers have come up with a new low-cost, homemade bed-bug detector.

To lure the bugs out of hiding, Wan-Tien Tsai of Rutgers University in New Brunswick, N.J., put dry ice into an insulated, one-third-gallon jug, the kind available at sports or camping stores. Adding 2.5 pounds of dry ice pellets and not quite closing the pour hole allowed carbon dioxide to leak out at a bug-teasing rate for some 11 hours at room temperature, she said.

She stood the jug in a plastic cat food dish with a piece of paper taped on the outside of the dish as a ramp up to the rim. The bowl’s steep, slippery inside, with an added dusting of talcum powder, kept bugs from crawling out again.

In tests in real apartments, the homemade setup detected bed bugs as well, or better, than did two brands of professional exterminating equipment, Tsai said December 16 at the annual meeting of the Entomological Society of America.

The parts, including the dry ice, cost $15 and don’t require any special skills for assembly. “Everyone can do it,” she said.

These days a growing number of people might want to. The tiny, night-crawling bugs that draw blood and can leave itching welts had dwindled to rarity in North America during most of the last century. But since the 1990s, outbreaks have surged. The bugs flatten themselves into crevices in furniture, fabric and even electrical devices, and can prove difficult to eradicate. Many of today’s bed bugs are resistant to pyrethroid insecticides, which account for much of indoor pest treatments.

Tsai worked with Changlu Wang, also at Rutgers, for six months on designing homemade devices that lure bed bugs out into a trap so residents can tell whether a home is infested. Like many insects that search for blood, bed bugs are attracted to plumes of concentrated carbon dioxide, good clues that an animal filled with liquid dinner is breathing somewhere nearby. In lab tests, carbon dioxide beat heat and several chemical attractants in drawing the bugs out of hiding, Wang reported at the meeting.

He has published on low-tech ways to attract bed bugs with carbon dioxide. For example, setting out dry ice in insulated travel mugs can work. Apartment dwellers don’t need research supply companies for dry ice. Beverage companies, for example, may sell it by the pound.

To design a new low-tech detection system, Tsai experimented with various setups but says her breakthrough came when she discovered the one-third-gallon insulated jugs. They performed well in lab tests, so she decided to test them in apartments that had low levels of bed-bug infestation. She searched for bed bugs herself to confirm that apartments were suitable. Then she set either her homemade detector or a commercial one in each apartment near a typical bug haven, such as the sofa.

Designing and testing a low-cost detector is a substantial contribution to the field, comments entomologist Stephen Kells of the University of Minnesota in St. Paul. During decades of low bed-bug infestations, scientists didn’t study them much. "We have literally skipped a generation of knowledge with this pest," he says.

Studies from early in the last century may not describe today’s bed-bugs well, says entomologist Andrea Polanco-Pinzón of Virginia Tech in Blacksburg. Older generations of bed bugs weren’t resistant to pesticides and lived in tougher environments: houses without central heating.

On the bright side though, Polanco-Pinzón reported at the meeting that her survival tests found that a pesticide-resistant strain she collected from Richmond, Va., lived at most two months without feeding. That record, set by the fifth stage of the immature bugs, falls far short of the year and a half reported in the old literature.


Found in: Biology and Life

Comments 5
  • Detecting bedbugs isn't the problem! If you think you have them, you'll find them! We found that packing tape collects them from the bedding just fine. Vacuuming, wrapping the mattress and box spring in packing tape (sticky side out) also helps trap the missed strays. Diatomaceous earth, dusted on the mattress and box spring, floor area (and then tossing allergy covers on them), more DE under baseboards, followed by taping baseboards with painters tape for a couple of months and hanging a no-pest strip down was successful for us. We also bagged everything up from the immediate bed area (including Science News going back to 2000!), dusted them with DE in the plastic bags and let them sit for 60 days sealed up. Whew! We won!
    quilteresq quilteresq
    Dec. 20, 2009 at 10:23am
  • Yes, DE works well. I've left it in place for a few months, as it is not toxic, and doesn't "expire". Worked better than 4 visits by exterminators and the disposal (over my objections) of a favorite sofa!
    Brian Hall Brian Hall
    Dec. 20, 2009 at 11:55am
  • What I don't understand is why bed bugs aren't more widely reported in the mainstream media. From everything I've read, these critters are a major problem in the entire USA...and abroad.

    This maps make it's seem like bed bug infestation is in-line with the general population numbers:

    [Link was removed]

    I assumed there would be higher infestation rates in warmer climates but that doesn't appear to be the case.

    Science  Dude Science Dude
    Dec. 30, 2009 at 10:08pm
  • It would be helpful to provide a photo of this configuration. I can understand 1/3 gallon jug, but I don't know height and diameter, but I have no good idea what size plastic cat food dish to use. Diameter? Height? Straight side? Sloping curved sides? If there is a brand name on the jug, then mask it in fairness to other manufacturers. I heard about this from ThePeoplesPharmace.com website. Thanks. I don't have any right now, but it is good to know about. In response to Science Dude's comment, it seems the main stream media is more interested in John Edwards bedding and not bed bugs, but I have seem more articles in the news lately.
    wes wes
    Feb. 2, 2010 at 9:49am
  • Picture for the bed bug trap developed at Rutgers plus the full step-by-step article

    njaes.rutgers.edu/pubs/publication.asp?pid=FS1117
    Bed Bugs Bed Bugs
    Jun. 7, 2010 at 11:34am
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Suggested Reading :
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  • Michael Potter’s introduction to bed bugs [Go to]
  • Milius, S. 2009. Scent of alarm identifies male bed bugs. Science News 176(Nov. 21):13. [Go to]
  • Polanco, A., et al. 2009. Survivorship and growth potential of modern bed bug populations (Cimex lectularius) in the United States. Entomological Society of America meeting. December 13–16.
Citations & References :
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  • New York versus bed bugs: [Go to]
  • Tsai, W.T., and C. Wang. 2009. Comparative effectiveness of three bed bug (Cimex lectularius) monitoring devices. Entomological Society of America meeting. Dec. 13–16.
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