Evidence of resurgence in N orth America

Public Health Significance of Urban Pests 135 Gbakima and colleagues 2002 reported a very high prevalence of both common and tro- pical bedbugs up to 98 of rooms infested in camps for internally displaced persons in Freetown, Sierra Leone. In Australia, a government public health agency reported a 400 increase in bedbug complaints submitted during 2001–2004, compared with 1997–2000. They also reported increased interceptions of bedbugs mainly in luggage by national quarantine inspectors from 1986 to 2003, with 74 of those occurring from 1999 to 2003 Doggett, Geary Russell, 2004.

4.2.4. Other species of Cimicidae that can affect people

Besides the common bedbug, two other species of bugs in the family Cimicidae are synan- thropic ecologically associated with people and historically well-known and significant pests of people in certain geographical regions. Those are the tropical bedbug species, C. hemipterus , which is distributed throughout the tropics, and Leptocimex boueti, which is limited to tropical western Africa. Several other species of the Cimicidae, such as the European swallow bug Oeciacushirun- dinis , frequently enter human dwellings and feed on people opportunistically, especially when their normal hosts are eliminated or depart on normal natural migrations. The eas- tern bat bug Cimex adjunctus, which feeds on several species of bats and is distributed mainly east of the Rocky Mountains in North America, frequently invades human dwel- lings and readily feeds on people. The cliff swallow bug Oeciacus vicarius, which lives in the nests of cliff swallows Petrochelidon pyrrhonota and is distributed throughout the nearctic region that is, the biogeographic region that includes the Arctic and temperate areas of North America and Greenland, will sometimes bite people when its hosts are removed or leave on annual migrations, or when people disturb these bugs in their habi- tat. The European swallow bug, which is associated with house martins Delicon urbica and is distributed throughout northern Africa, most of Europe and Turkey, will some- times enter human dwellings and feed on people. The poultry bug or Mexican chicken bug, Haematosiphon inodorus, will readily feed on people in Mexico and the south-wes- tern United States, but it is most commonly found associated with poultry nests and the nests of large raptors, such as hawks and eagles. The chimney swift bug Cimexopsisnyc- talis , which lives in the nests of Chimney swifts Chaetura pelagica, is distributed throu- ghout most of the eastern United States and has occasionally bitten people. There are at least four species of bat bugs in the species group with Cimex pipistrelli. They collectively occur throughout most of Europe and feed mainly on local species of bats. These and other species in the C. pipistrelli group occasionally invade human dwellings, and one or more species have been reported to occasionally feed on people. The taxono- mic status of this species group is presently somewhat unclear. The western bat bug, Cimex pilosellus, which feeds on several species of bats and is found almost exclusively west of the Rocky Mountains in North America, has been repeatedly reported to invade human living spaces, but there are no confirmed reports of this spe- cies actually biting a person. Because multiple species of the Cimicidae can potentially occur in human dwellings, precise and careful identification is critical for proper imple- Bedbugs 134

4.2. Resurgence of bedbug populations in Europe and North America

4.2.1. Evidence of resurgence in N orth America

In 1997, in the United States, reports of bedbug and specimens submitted for identifica- tion to the National Pest Management Association NPMA were limited to two separate infestations in two states. By September 2001, such submissions totalled 29 infestations in 18 states and the District of Columbia. By April 2004, bedbugs in samples submitted for identification had come from a total of 108 infestations in 4 Canadian provinces, 3 states of Mexico and 40 states in the United States. Also, public or media inquiries to the NPMA about bedbugs have gone from only 1 in 1997 to at least 14 in 2001and to more than 100 in 2005. Many pest management companies in the United States have seen major increases in services for bedbug infestations over the past few years Krueger, 2000; Cooper Harlan, 2004; Potter, 2004; Gooch, 2005. For example, one small company went from two unusual infestations in 2001 to an average of a call a day Johnson, 2005. Also, a national company had an increase of 300 in bed bug control calls from 2000 to 2001, another 70 increase in 2002 and another 70 increase in 2003 F. Meek, Orkin Pest Control, Atlanta, GA, personal communication, June 2005. Moreover, one small company, which formerly specialized in termite control, reported that more than 25 of its profit for 2004 came from bedbug treatments Johnson, 2005. Resources invested by the NPMA, manufacturers, suppliers and individual pest management companies to train PMPs in bedbug management have increased greatly in the past two years Cooper Harlan, 2004; Potter, 2004; Gooch, 2005; Johnson, 2005. Furthermore, between the beginning and end of 2003, public health officials in Toronto, Canada, reported a 100 increase in phone complaints about bedbugs, a 100 increase in the number of com- mercial treatments for bedbugs in private residences and a more than 50 increased inci- dence of bedbugs in public shelters Hwang et al., 2005.

4.2.2. Evidence of resurgence in Europe