PLoS ONE (Jan 2017)

Climbing ability of teneral and sclerotized adult bed bugs and assessment of adhesive properties of the exoskeletal fluid using atomic force microscopy.

  • Kevin R Hinson,
  • Vladimir Reukov,
  • Eric P Benson,
  • Patricia A Zungoli,
  • William C Bridges,
  • Brittany R Ellis,
  • Jinbo Song

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0189215
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 12
p. e0189215

Abstract

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We observed that teneral adults (72 h), and sclerotized group 2 (S2) bed bugs (n = 30, height climbed = 2.64 cm at >72 h post molt). When heights from all climbing events were summed, teneral bed bugs (650.8 cm climbed) differed significantly (P< 0.01) from recently sclerotized (82 cm climbed) and sclerotized (group 1 = 104.6 cm climbed, group 2 = 107.8 cm climbed) bed bugs. These findings suggested that the external surface of teneral bed bug exoskeletons possess an adhesive property. Using atomic force microscopy (AFM), we found that adhesion force of an exoskeletal (presumably molting) fluid decreased almost five-fold from 88 to 17 nN within an hour of molting. Our findings may have implications for laboratory safety and the effectiveness of bed bug traps, barriers, and biomimetic-based adhesives.