Close X
Thursday, November 14, 2024
ADVT 
National

New research out of B.C. university helps team take bite out of bedbug epidemic

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Dec, 2014 11:05 AM

    VANCOUVER — Enduring 180,000 bites is the scientific price a British Columbia biologist had to pay so her team of researchers could suck a little life out of the worldwide bedbug epidemic.

    A team of biologists, a chemist and students from Simon Fraser University in Burnaby, B.C., announced Monday that they have identified a set of chemicals that can lure bedbugs into traps and keep them there.

    The findings are significant because the pests, which were once thought eradicated in industrial countries, have reappeared over the past two decades, infesting everything from low-income housing to pricey hotels and causing health concerns, too.

    Biologist Regine Gries, who with her husband Prof. Gerhard Gries, form part of the team, said she was initially a little reluctant and disgusted to act as a host so the pests could feed and scientists could gather and analyze the bugs skin and feces.

    She said she got over those feelings because she, unlike others, was resistant to the bites.

    "I calmed myself down thinking when human beings were still living in caves, they were probably bitten by bedbugs, by fleas, by mice and who knows what, all these insects associated with humans," she said. "So I think humans can endure this, and I'm lucky enough that I have no side effects, that I just can handle it."

    Not only can bedbug bites cause rashes and itching, but a recent study linked them to Chagas, a disease that can cause serious heart and digestive problems in those who are infected, said SFU Chemistry Prof. Robert Britton, who is also a team member.

    The team is now working with a company based out of Victoria, B.C., to develop the first effective and affordable trap to detect and monitor infestations.

    The discoveries were made in three separate phases and began when the Gries and their students began the research about eight years ago.

    Gerhard Gries said they initially found a pheromone blend — chemical substances secreted by animals for detection — in the skin of bedbugs. He said they attracted the pests in lab experiments but not in infested apartments.

    He said the researchers realized a component was missing. Britton joined the team and used the university's state-of-the-art spectrometers to study the chemicals Regine Gries found in the bedbugs' shed skin.

    Britton, the Gries and their students then discovered a histamine, a molecule that had previously eluded researchers, signalled a "safe shelter" to the bedbugs, meaning once they came into contact with it they remained in place.

    Gerhard Gries said his wife further studied the bedbugs' feces and found three new components. He said the combination of all the components and the histamine became the lure they sought.

    He said bedbugs are lured to the trap by the airborne components, and once they come into contact with the histamine, which is placed on a piece of filter paper, they remain put.

    Britton said the trap's chemical costs are just under a dime.

    Gerhard Gries said a cardboard box served as a trap during the experiments.

    "One of the real benefits of this new technology will be that it is effective and affordable," he said.

    The research has been published in the leading chemistry journal Angewandte Chemie, and was funded by a grant from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada in partnership with Contech Enterprises Inc.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Ottawa Promises New Wireless Spectrum Measures To Attract New Carriers

    Ottawa Promises New Wireless Spectrum Measures To Attract New Carriers
    VANCOUVER — The federal government has announced new details about its plans to auction off wireless spectrum as it attempts to entice new mobile carriers to enter the market and bring down prices for cellular phone users.

    Ottawa Promises New Wireless Spectrum Measures To Attract New Carriers

    Burnaby Seeks To Force Pipeline Company To Pay For Cleanup, Policing

    Burnaby Seeks To Force Pipeline Company To Pay For Cleanup, Policing
    VANCOUVER — A Vancouver-area city is asking the National Energy Board to hand Kinder Morgan a bill that could be worth more than $2 million for policing and cleanup costs after pipeline work was targeted by protesters last month.

    Burnaby Seeks To Force Pipeline Company To Pay For Cleanup, Policing

    Residents To Vote On 'Congestion' Tax To Fund Metro Vancouver Transit Upgrades

    Residents To Vote On 'Congestion' Tax To Fund Metro Vancouver Transit Upgrades
    VICTORIA — Residents of Metro Vancouver will be asked to agree to pay an extra 0.5 per cent sales tax after the province approved a plebiscite on funding major upgrades to the regional transportation network.

    Residents To Vote On 'Congestion' Tax To Fund Metro Vancouver Transit Upgrades

    B.C. Reports Call For Crime-fighting Boss, Job Training For Inmates

    B.C. Reports Call For Crime-fighting Boss, Job Training For Inmates
    VICTORIA — British Columbia needs to appoint a crime-fighting boss who can cut through provincial, municipal and social bureaucracies to build unified crime-prevention teams, say government reports released Thursday.

    B.C. Reports Call For Crime-fighting Boss, Job Training For Inmates

    B.C. Mine Inspector Gives Ok For Mount Polley Dam Rebuild After Tailings Breach

    B.C. Mine Inspector Gives Ok For Mount Polley Dam Rebuild After Tailings Breach
    VICTORIA — British Columbia's chief inspector of mines is allowing the owner of the Mount Polley mine to start repairs on the tailings pond that breached, sending a surge of mine waste and water into nearby lakes and rivers.

    B.C. Mine Inspector Gives Ok For Mount Polley Dam Rebuild After Tailings Breach

    Ghiz reiterates he won't run for the federal Liberals in 2015

    Ghiz reiterates he won't run for the federal Liberals in 2015
    QUEBEC — Prince Edward Island Premier Robert Ghiz is again ruling out running for the federal Liberals in next year's election.

    Ghiz reiterates he won't run for the federal Liberals in 2015