Posted by: Tony Carson | 14 August, 2007

Bed bugs on the march

The Cimex lectularius, better known and despised as the common bedbug, is snuggling into households across Southern California, giving people the heebie- jeebies. The blood-sucking, heat-seeking, pint-size parasites aren’t believed by the experts to transmit disease, but they do have a way of cranking up stress levels.

“It was just horrendous,” said a West Hollywood middle-school teacher, who, like others who have been horrified to have lived with the uninvited guests, asked that she not be identified. “Think of how you wouldn’t sleep at night if you had roaches, and this is even worse,” she said. “These roaches feed on you.”

They used to be associated with cramped and dirty living quarters, grimy motels and high-rise living in places like New York. For much of the second part of the last century the liberal use of the eventually banned pesticide DDT seemed to all but do away with them. Now bedbugs have moved into single-family homes with a vengeance and taken up lodging in schools, hospitals and college dormitories too. The wide-open spaces of the West are no defense.

The LA Ties has the story Bedbugs tuck into Southland.

Leave a response

Your response:

Categories