Purity
Bed Bug Control Residential and Hospitality Applications A
dog’s keen sense of smell can
detect bed bugs in all crevices
quickly, while it can take an exterminator
hours to perform the same inspection.
A trained pest management professional
can only detect visual signs of bed
bugs, live bugs, exoskeletons, eggs
and droppings. In order to confirm
activity behind walls, baseboards
or under carpets, the room would
have to be stripped down and baseboards
pulled away from the walls. By using
our K-9 detection team the room can
remain intact and offer a 90% accuracy
rate, as opposed to the approximately
30% accuracy rate of a trained human
inspector.
Bed bugs are persistent creatures.
Getting rid of them is not an easy
task and one that should be left
to a professional. Lack of professional
treatment comes with great risk to
a business such as a hotel. Hotel
owners can find themselves dealing
with litigation from angry, bitten
guests.
A Purity Pest Control
professional will inspect and treat
your home or business for bed bugs
and other pests. Call 1-905-761-9388
to schedule an appointment or submit
an Inspection
Request Form today!
Most
householders of this generation
have never seen a bed bug.
Until recently, they were also
a rarity among pest control
professionals. Bed bug infestations
were common in Canada before
World War II, but with improvements
in hygiene, and the widespread
use of DDT during the 1940s
and '50s, the bugs all but
vanished. The pests remained
prevalent, though in other
regions of the world including
Asia, Africa, Central/South
America and Europe and in recent
years due to world travel,
bed bugs have made a comeback
in Canada and the U.S. They
are increasingly being encountered
in homes, apartments, hotels,
motels, dormitories, shelters
and modes of transport such
as buses and trains.
Adult
bed bugs are about 1/4 inch
long and are reddish-brown
with oval, flattened bodies.
The immature (nymphs) resemble
the adults, but are smaller
and somewhat lighter in colour.
Bed bugs do not fly, but can
move quickly over floors, walls,
ceilings and other surfaces.
Female bed bugs lay their eggs
in secluded areas, depositing
up to five a day and 500 during
a lifetime. The eggs are tiny,
whitish, and hard to see without
magnification (individual eggs
are about the size of a dust
spec). When first laid, the eggs
are sticky, causing them to adhere
to substrates such as your mattress.
Newly hatched nymphs are no bigger
than a pinhead. As they grow,
they shed their skin (molting)
five times before reaching maturity.
A blood meal is needed between
each successive molt and that’s
where humans come in.
Bed
bugs are active mainly at night.
During the daytime, they prefer
to hide close to where people
sleep (their next meal). Their
flattened bodies enable them
to fit into tiny crevices,
especially those associated
with mattresses, box springs,
bed frames, and headboards.
Bed bugs do not have nests
like ants or bees, but do tend
to congregate in habitual hiding
places.
The
reaction to a bed bug bite
depends on the person – some
are mild and others are severe.
Usually a small, hard, swollen
white welt develops at the
site of the bite accompanied
by severe itching sometimes
lasting hours. Bed bugs feed
by piercing the skin with an
elongated beak. Their saliva
contains an anaesthetic, which
is injected at the time of
the bite to reduce pain in
the victim. Bed bugs need blood
to moult (shed their skin)
as they grow. A typical bed
bug molts at least five times
before reaching maturity when
they start the breeding process
all over again. Yikes!