Bedbug Anti-Sex Chemical May Treat Infestations

Adult bedbugs, which look like flat, reddish-brown ovals, are wingless and can grow to three-sixteenths of an inch long.
(Image credit: ranklincountyohio.gov)

Baby bedbugs produce an anti-aphrodisiac that could thwart the efforts of lustful, mature male bedbugs that would otherwise mate with them, a new study suggests. The chemical they produce could prove as a useful remedy to bedbug infestations.

"These results may be applied to decrease bedbug populations by mating disruption," study researcher Vincent Harraca, from Lund University in Sweden, said in a statement.

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