Bed bugs in your car – what to do about an infestation


Dave Campbell

When most people think of the annoying scary creatures that have invaded entire neighborhoods that have long been motels and villas, they think of mattresses and bedding as a place to hide. Although these insects usually reside in your mattress, there are also other places where they can live. The truth is that you can be overrun in your car, especially if you are traveling with luggage or if you have bedbugs in your home. It is also easy to take them from a hotel or motel to your vehicle and leave them there when you get out of the car at your destination.

The problem with bedbugs in your car is that they can bite you. If you somehow find insect bites that seem foreign to your skin or a rash, you may need to look for bed bugs in the car.

The biggest problem with bedbugs in your car is that these creatures can stick to your clothes, luggage, things, and even pets. This is a rare occurrence, but the bedbugs that live in your car are easy to access to everything you have and move from the car to anywhere, including at home or in the office.

Most laypeople don’t know much about bedbugs. After all, what should I know? Everything in the name: bed bugs. But how do they go to bed in the first place? For the mistakes known to stay in a relatively small rectangle throughout her life, she seems to be wandering!

Bedbugs are well-known travelers. The first way to spread from one bed to another is to walk quickly from one traveler to another, hitting every hotel, house and car (unfortunately) in their heels. Here’s what you need to know about the bloody trends of tourists hiding in their beds and how to prevent them from going home for free.

How do they get in?

Bedbugs are like staying still, but that doesn’t mean they won’t move. As you can imagine, the bugs are nocturnal; they move and wander in search of prey at night. Usually, what happens is that an unexpected carrier takes a passenger or two in a bag or piece of furniture. The unfortunate victim will put the pest hiding place in his car.

At this point, the bedbug will move from its bunker to another location in the same vehicle. From there, they can hit the car for a long time or finally enter the house. Bedbugs are most active early in the morning, around 3 or 4 a.m. They don’t move at a special speed, but they can easily climb on transparent surfaces. Look for them in corners and crevices, especially in the dark and the heat.

Where to find them

Bedbugs are always hiding. They never walk around until they are hungry. You cannot see them during the day, unless they need to breastfeed, as they prefer to move at night.

This means that you must search for your car to find them. When you think they like to hide, you should check the places below where they can hide:

• Under the car brushes

• Inside car seats

• Car boot

• Deep and dark corners

• Tears on the ceiling

• Table Box

Although bedbugs are tiny insects, it will be difficult to find them. Therefore, you need to have a flashlight, a credit card, and a magnifying glass to find it:

Can they survive hot or cold?

The period of life in bedbugs always depends on the amount of food they eat and the ideal environmental conditions.

The car will provide them with survival conditions by keeping them away from heat or cold.

The ideal temperature for bedbugs is to maintain a life between 113 degrees Fahrenheit and 0 degrees Fahrenheit. So, bedbugs will likely stay in your car for a long time.

The second factor is nutrition. Well-fed bedbugs can survive more than a year without feeding. If you already have enough bedbugs to feed you, you have a serious problem.

Various types of treatment

Bedbugs move from place to place, attaching themselves to the host’s clothing. If your home or office is endemic and you often travel by car, these parasites can find their way into your car and cause rapid infection.

The good news is that there are several safe and effective treatments to remove bedbugs from your car. The following tips can help keep your car free from bedbugs and prevent infections.

Inspection

The first step to ensuring a car without a bed bug through regular inspection. It involves making sure that you do not have bugs in the car that might cause you and your passengers an injury. Treatments can be expensive and time-consuming, so it’s important to be sure about bedbugs before you go ahead.

Start by thoroughly cleaning the interior of your car and remove excessive clutter where bedbugs might hide. Once this is pushed back, do a full visual inspection of your car. Far from the search for insects themselves, watch for the contextual marks you leave behind, including bloodstains and small dark patches of feces. It may also be useful to use the tape to increase detection accuracy.

Cleaning

Bedbugs love to get dirty because it gives them the power not to reveal themselves. As such, it is recommended that you consider regular cleaning of your car as a method of eliminating the bugs. By cleaning your car regularly, you can detect these infiltration parasites and avoid injuries. In addition to removing accumulated garbage, avoid storing your clothes in your car for two purposes: to prevent bedbugs from sticking to these items, and to prevent them from driving a free vehicle around your house. When cleaning, be sure to thoroughly clean any cracks and openings in your vehicle to help remove the remaining bedbugs.

A single bed bug can lay 200 to 250 eggs during its lifetime. They prefer to lay their eggs in protected cracks and crevices, and these eggs hatch in about 6 to 10 days. If left unconditionally, under normal circumstances, you will live with bedbugs for 10-11 months. There can be three or more generations of bedbugs born each year. Since bedbugs of all ages are affected, you should continue to clean your car regularly to prevent it from multiplying.

Seat covers and floor mats

In addition to keeping your car clean, don’t forget to wash seat covers and floor mats regularly. Washing these items can help kill any remaining pests that may be hidden in your car, and will give you another chance to check for them. Once washed, dry them at a high temperature to kill any bedbugs that might be alive, and double-check before putting them back in your car.

Steam inside

Heat treatment is one of the safest and most effective ways to treat bedbugs. Although you cannot access the same equipment as that used by professionals, you can use a steam cleaner to get the same pest control benefits. Make sure you use a machine that can emit more than 200 degrees of high-pressure steam to remove bedbugs from your car effectively. You can also use a fabric accessory with a fabric cover to better control the application of this vapor.

Diatomaceous earth

Diatomaceous earth is a whitish-yellow mineral made from the fossilized remains of small aquatic organisms. This substance is extremely effective in killing a variety of insects, including bedbugs, and is safe enough to be used around humans and animals without causing harm.

One may find diatomaceous online or at the local hardware outlet. Sprinkle it all over the car and leave it within some few days so that you can get the best results. After three days, just clean the dust off your car. Keep in mind that several treatments may be necessary for the Earth’s diatom to be effective.

Fumigation

Fumigation has long been an effective treatment for pests at home, but did you know that it can also be done on cars that infect bedbugs? Just like at home, vehicles are closed and covered with a cloth to treat fumigation, and it usually takes just one treatment to remove all pests from your vehicle effectively. Even better, you can also put endemic items like clothes or bedding in the car to be treated.

While each of these methods is effective in treating and treating bedbugs, the highest success rate will be achieved by combining two or more methods. If bedbugs remain a problem in your car after performing the above treatments, contact a pest control specialist may be the solution you need. Professionals can safely apply heat or chemical treatment without endangering you, your family or your car. Remember that bedbugs are flexible and keeping a car-free from pests requires more than one treatment, so continuous preventive measures must be taken to eliminate them once and for all.

Reference: https://content.ces.ncsu.edu/bedbugs-biology-and-control

 

Dave Campbell

I'm Dave Campbell and the owner of deadpestz.com. You can read more about me and my background on my About Me page.

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