Schools
Researchers from Rutgers Devise Bed Bug Detection Device
Research on bed bugs has become important since the 1973 ban on DDT.
As bed bugs become a problem in the wake of a ban on DDT, three researchers from Rutgers University are working on a trap that won’t kill the pests, but will alert homeowners to their presence, National Geographic reports.
Narinderpal Singh, Changlu Wang, and Richard Cooper created a bedbug detector out of a dog bowl and black duct tape, according to the report. The bedbugs are attracted to black and natural climb vertical surfaces. Once they climb the tape, they get stuck in the bowl.
The detector becomes more effective when two body odors, nonanal and 1-octen-3-ol, are mixed with spearmint oil, and coriander Egyptian oil as a cocktail and put into the bowl, although sugar, yeast and water are just as effective, according to the report.
Find out what's happening in New Brunswickwith free, real-time updates from Patch.
According to the report, their invention captures three times more bedbugs than the Climbup insect interceptor, the leading bedbug detector currently on the market.
Wang is an an assistant extension specialist at the School of Environmental and Biological Sciences, and is studying the feeding habits and dispersing patterns of bedbugs, according to Rutgers.
Find out what's happening in New Brunswickwith free, real-time updates from Patch.
The bed bug problem has become prolific in the northeast, according to Rutgers.
Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.