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What do they do?
Bedbugs pierce the skin of a sleeping human and feed on its blood. The bedbug will hold the host's skin using its forelegs and pierce it with it's mouth whilst injecting a small amount of saliva. It takes 5-10 minutes for it to complete it's feed of blood. During the course of a feed an adult bed bug can suck up to 7 times its own weight in blood. They do not not transmit any known diseases.
Where do they live?
Bedbugs live under the seams of matresses, under loose wallpaper, floorboards and in the cracks and crevices of furniture walls and paintings.
The bedbug life-cycle
A female lays 200-500 eggs at the rate of 3 or 4 eggs per day but the actual number depends upon the temperature and other external factors. When temperatures are below 10C they do not lay eggs. At temperatures above 70°F eggs hatch in 6-17 days, below this temperature they may take up to 28 days.
It takes around 2 months for a bedbug to become an adult. They do not feed every night but at intervals of a few days to a week. Bedbugs can live for 4 to 12 months without feeding. The bugs will survive longer without a meal at lower temperatures than at higher temperatures.
Bedbugs can't fly and are most commonly spread through being transported eg being brought back into the home in holiday luggage.
The treatment should take 2-3 hours but it is recommended that the house is left empty for 4 hours afterwards.