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What are Bedbugs?
- Common Bedbugs (Cimex lectularius) are small, flat red-brown insects. The adults reach 3-5 mm in length.
- They have a small head and large, oval shaped body. They do not have any wings, but the legs are well developed.
- There is no larval stage. The young hatch from small, elongated white eggs as ‘mini-adults’. The nymph will develop through five stages to an adult.
- Bedbugs are tough and resilient insects. An adult can forego a meal for up to a year under ideal conditions.
- Bedbugs are excellent climbers and will live inside small cracks and crevices nearby to their feeding areas. They can be found in all parts of a bed/matteress, and in any gaps or crevices up to several feet from their feeding area in places such as the furniture, wallpaper, skirting boards and carpets.
- Unlike fleas, the young will immediately feed on the blood of the host (human), by biting the host at night whilst the host is sleeping.
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