Just as they’ve made an itchy, scratchy comeback in hotel rooms, bedbugs increasingly are appearing in dorm rooms, say college officials and pest-control experts, who are busy devising ways to eradicate the bloodsuckers.
“They’re taking off right now,” says Dan Mizer, associate director of residence life at Texas A&M University.
Bedbugs are everywhere, he says. “They’re finding these things in public transit, in movie theaters, in cruise ships, in all the hospitality accommodations.”
Blame an increase in international travel, bigger bedbug populations worldwide, new protocols that discourage widespread spraying and possibly even tougher bugs that are resistant to pesticides.
The size of an apple seed, the nocturnal six-leggers hitchhike on luggage, old furniture and clothing and can live up to a year without a blood meal. So a dorm room left empty over the summer poses but a brief nutritional challenge.